Steamboat Springs has become a tourist attraction for prospective marijuana users, some of whom end up in emergency rooms.
By Teresa Ristow
Steamboat Springs
— A new report shows a correlation between the legalization of
recreational marijuana and an uptick in emergency room visits for
complications associated with the drug's use, particularly in Routt
County.
#The Colorado Department of Health and Environment’s report, “Monitoring Health Concerns related to Marijuana in Colorado in 2016”
was released in late January and uses marijuana-related hospital
billing codes to count the number of visits related to use of marijuana,
which was legalized recreationally in 2014.
#According
to the report, 74 people visited an emergency room in Routt County for
something related to marijuana consumption, a rate of 17 per 1,000
people, the second-highest rate among Colorado, counties behind Summit
County, according to the report.
In 2014 and through September
2015, another 40 people visited the emergency room for marijuana use, a
number the report concluded led to a higher rate of visits than between
2011 and 2013.
#“The
typical incidents tend to overwhelmingly involve tourists, but locals
do have problems, too,” said Dr. David Wilkinson, medical director of
the Emergency Department at Yampa Valley Medical Center.
#Wilkinson
said nearly all the incidents involve edible marijuana, and he’s
personally never seen anyone enter the ED for a marijuana-related issue
that didn’t involve edible marijuana products.
#Wilkinson
described a typical visit by using an example of two couples in their
60s who visited Steamboat Springs from out of state to try marijuana.
#“There’s clearly a marijuana destination component to Steamboat Springs,” Wilkinson said.
#One
woman came into the ED with paranoia after becoming more high than she
intended, Wilkinson said, and the woman’s husband was distraught because
he had “killed his wife.”
#Meanwhile, the other couple was sitting down eating ice cream, Wilkinson said.
#Most
people who come to the ED with a negative reaction to marijuana are
often naïve users, who become paranoid after not understanding what’s
happening to their body.
#“They get extremely anxious, they’re hyperventilating, they’re over-emotional,” Wilkinson said.
#While
he doesn't advocate against marijuana use, Wilkinson said he thinks the
community has a responsibility to more thoroughly educate people,
particularly children, about the drug.
#Due
to recreational legalization, children are making judgments at an
earlier age about what they think of marijuana and whether they’ll try
it, Wilkinson said.
#“There’s
clearly a community and a public responsibility to begin to provide
some funding for education, especially in the middle and elementary
schools,” he said. “I really, really am committed to the idea that this
community needs to provide education,” Wilkinson said. “We have an
opportunity to put the message out.”
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