
Since 1990, Claire C. Carr has worked as a lawyer for Kalbaugh, Pfund & Messersmith, PC in Richmond, VA. As the vice president, managing partner, and shareholder of the firm, Claire C. Carr handles workers’ compensation defense for insurance carriers and businesses.
Recently, a study performed by researchers at Temple University discovered a surprising link between workers’ compensation claims and access to medical marijuana. According to the review of data from the Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the Current Population Survey from the Census Bureau, workers’ comp claims decreased in areas where medical marijuana was legal. Researchers found that the prevalence of the claims decreased by 6.7 percent once medical marijuana was legalized.
Beyond a decrease in workers’ compensation claims, researchers also noted that the claims decreased in amount. After a state legalized medical marijuana, the dollar amount of workers’ comp claims lowered by about 0.8 percent.
Researchers aren’t entirely sure why these changes occur once legalization happens. However, they believe it has to do with the fact that medical marijuana is capable of managing many symptoms of the injuries that people file claims for. For instance, while the treatment cannot cure chronic pain, it has been tied to a reduction in pain symptoms, thus helping patients better manage the illness or injury that they would have filed a workers’ comp claim for.
