AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzes the impact of recreational cannabis access on the market share of over-the-counter sleep medications in Colorado counties from late 2013 to late 2014, using grocery store scanner data and multivariable regression.
  • Findings indicate a significant 236% decrease in the market share of sleep aids following the entry of dispensaries, particularly affecting diphenhydramine- and doxylamine-based products, while herbal sleep aids and melatonin remained less influenced.
  • The research suggests that many individuals may be using cannabis as an alternative treatment for insomnia despite sleep disturbances not being recognized as a qualifying condition for medical cannabis, highlighting the need for more studies on the effectiveness and side effects of both cannabis and

Article Abstract

This study seeks to understand whether people substitute between recreational cannabis and conventional over-the-counter (OTC) sleep medications. UPC-level grocery store scanner data in a multivariable panel regression design were used to compare the change in the monthly market share of sleep aids with varying dispensary-based recreational cannabis access (existence, sales, and count) in Colorado counties between 12/2013 and 12/2014. We measured annually-differenced market shares for sleep aids as a portion of the overall OTC medication market, thus accounting for store-level demand shifts in OTC medication markets and seasonality, and used the monthly changes in stores' sleep aid market share to control for short-term trends. Relative to the overall OTC medication market, sleep aid market shares were growing prior to recreational cannabis availability. The trend reverses (a 236% decrease) with dispensary entry (-0.33 percentage points, 95% CI -0.43 to -0.24, p < 0.01) from a mean market share growth of 0.14 ± 0.97. The magnitude of the market share decline increases as more dispensaries enter a county and with higher county-level cannabis sales. The negative associations are driven by diphenhydramine- and doxylamine-based sleep aids rather than herbal sleep aids and melatonin. These findings support survey evidence that many individuals use cannabis to treat insomnia, although sleep disturbances are not a specific qualifying condition under any U.S. state-level medical cannabis law. Investigations designed to measure the relative effectiveness and side effect profiles of conventional OTC sleep aids and cannabis-based products are urgently needed to improve treatment of sleep disturbances while minimizing potentially serious negative side effects.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ctim.2019.102207DOI Listing

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