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According to data from the US Centers for Disease Control, in 2017, the number of deaths due to opioid overdose nationwide increased by 10%. In Illinois, the growth rate is even higher, exceeding 13%. Advocates of medical marijuana believe that when it comes to pain treatment, medical marijuana is a safer alternative to opioids and should be used as one of the solutions to curb the deadly epidemic. For this reason, a vending machine placed in Chicago recently passed the popularization of the medical effects of marijuana, hoping that people will have a new understanding of the effects of medical marijuana. The vending machine pop-up created by Chicago-based Tom Dick and Harry Creative Company is designed to help medical marijuana company Cresco Labs promote its Opioid Prescription Exchange Program (COPE), which encourages patients to consider opioid prescription abuse Use medical marijuana for treatment. Just one day after Illinois Governor Bruce Lawner signed a new law allowing medical marijuana to replace opioid painkillers, this vending machine that legally sells medical marijuana hit the streets. People passing by the vending machine near the Illinois government office building will be attracted by a variety of artificial opioid prescription bottles. Swallowed by 'pain'? Get free! Through text messages, this kind of attention-grabbing unmanned vending machine reminds people how addictive painkillers are. But instead of distributing fake prescriptions, the pop-up window of the vending machine distributed medical marijuana bottles (no marijuana), and each bottle contained instructions about COPE. In addition to the vending machines, the event also included a 20-foot-long 'NoBitu' brand, which features the story of those who have won the opioid war by smoking medical marijuana. For example, a 'NoBituary' tells the story of 42-year-old Anthony Taylor, who used medical marijuana to treat the pain caused by cancer and has now been relieved. Charlie Bachtell, CEO of Cresco Labs, said: 'The creativity and attention-grabbing strategies behind the COPE campaign will help raise people's non-traditional awareness of the use of medical marijuana as a prescription opioid substitute.' Tom Dick Harley Creative Company Greg Reifel, managing partner of the company, said: “The opioid epidemic has already had a devastating impact on thousands of Illinois families. We are helping us in helping Cresco Laboratories improve people’s lives. I am proud of the role played by medical marijuana as an alternative to opioids.' The above information is shared and reproduced by vending machines, please mark the previous one: Alternative vending machines focus on material distribution and inventory management