Cannabis coverage? Health insurance is next logical step for marijuana
I have spent my career caring for patients with chronic pain, dementia and other conditions that drain the quality of people's lives and the resources of our health care system. Too often, I've prescribed medications that are costly and dangerous, carrying high risks of dependency and death.
Many of my patients already use another option: medical cannabis. The plant is one of the most effective and safest treatments for a host of chronic conditions.
Yet many patients must choose between paying rent or paying out of pocket for cannabis because insurance companies refuse to cover it. Insurance coverage for medical cannabis is not a radical idea. It is the next logical step.
Together, the epidemics of chronic pain and dementia consume a staggering share of Medicare and Medicaid budgets. They also drive patients toward the drugs fueling our overdose crisis.
Cannabis can be an exit strategy. A study by
For patients with dementia, cannabis can improve sleep, appetite, mood and agitation symptoms - often allowing them to reduce or stop medications that have debilitating side effects.
The oft-heard claim that cannabis "lacks data" is outdated. A comprehensive research review by the
Research has expanded since then, with international models from
We also have growing patient-reported outcomes - structured data gathered directly from people using cannabis. These outcomes capture what clinical trials often miss: improvements in daily functioning, sleep, mood and quality of life.
Federal agencies are stuck in a catch-22:
Hospice programs provide a model for covering cannabis. They receive a daily payment from Medicare to cover all palliative needs.
Integrative pain programs, such as those offered at the
We should explore Medicaid waivers to allow cannabis coverage for chronic pain, anxiety and substance-use disorder.
Critics argue that cannabis is unsafe or that coverage would invite abuse. Most of those claims are based on recreational smoking, and not carefully dosed cannabis for medical use.
Cannabis is not appropriate for adolescents. But for adults, especially older adults, the benefits often far outweigh the risks.
Financial cost is another consideration. By reducing emergency room visits, imaging, physician appointments and dangerous drug interactions, insurance coverage would save money. Insurers are already paying for the consequences of chronic pain and dementia. Covering cannabis is in their financial interest.
Nearly 75% of
What we lack is political will.
As a physician, I cannot ignore treatments my patients are already using and benefiting from. Insurance companies should not ignore them, either.
Covering medical cannabis is logical, ethical and necessary. And it will save lives.
Kogan is an associate professor of medicine and chief medical officer of the



As health costs spike, a sour and divided Congress escapes one shutdown to face another
Ohio’s economic future is hazy, but a recession might be looming, Fed survey indicates
Advisor News
- The modern advisor: Merging income, insurance, and investments
- Financial shocks, caregiving gaps and inflation pressures persist
- Americans unprepared for increased longevity
- More investors will seek comprehensive financial planning
- Midlife planning for women: why it matters and how advisors should adapt
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- LIMRA: Annuity sales notch 10th consecutive $100B+ quarter
- AIG to sell remaining shares in Corebridge Financial
- Corebridge Financial, Equitable Holdings post Q1 earnings as merger looms
- AM Best Assigns Credit Ratings to Calix Re Limited
- Transamerica introduces new RILA with optional income features
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Hospital, clinics hurting as fewer Tri-Cities patients have health care coverage
- Reports on Insurance from State University of New York (SUNY) Albany Provide New Insights (Effects of National Insurance Reforms and State Medicaid Expansions Under the Affordable Care Act on Insurance Coverage Among American Indian and Alaska …): Insurance
- Findings from Kristi Martin et al Has Provided New Information about Managed Care and Specialty Pharmacy (Assessment of IPAY 2027 Medicare drug price negotiation maximum fair prices with prices in most-favored nation reference countries): Drugs and Therapies – Managed Care and Specialty Pharmacy
- Data on Hypertension Discussed by Denise Wolff and Colleagues (AMCP Market Insights: Getting to the heart of hard-to-control hypertension in managed care): Cardiovascular Diseases and Conditions – Hypertension
- Democratic candidates revive single-payer promise as California's healthcare system faces strain
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- AM Best Assigns Credit Ratings to Tokio Marine Newa Insurance Co., Ltd.
- Earnings roundup: Prudential works to save ‘unique’ Japanese market
- How life insurance became a living-benefits strategy
- Financial Focus : Keep your beneficiary choices up to date
- Equitable-Corebridge merger casts shadow over life insurance earnings
More Life Insurance News