You apparently didn't read the article. It cites the data from a peer reviewed article in the annals of internal medicine. Nothing clickbaity about it.
Maybe if you smoked less of the dummyweed you would understand what the article says.
From the second link:
Out of 2,567 marijuana-linked visits to the ER in 2012–2016 at the University of Colorado Hospital in Denver
So, over 4 years, they had 2,567 "marijuana-linked" visits to the ER. Or, about 641 visits per year.
According to hospital utilization data, the University of Colorado Hospital saw over 84,000 total ER visits in 2013, over 96,000 in 2014, over 101,000 in 2015, and over 100,000 in 2016. (2012 data is not provided in the Colorado Hospital Association's 5 year data). The actual total between 2013-2016 was 383,395.
https://cha.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/2017-Databank-Utillization-Data-5-year-trends.pdf
So, (ignoring 2012 data) marijuana-linked hospital visits made up 0.67% of all ER visits (again, ignoring an entire year). If we assume the difference between 2013 and 2014 applies to 2012 to 2013, then 2012's ER visits would hypothetically be somewhere around 72,000 visits. Bringing the tyotal from 2012-2016 to about 455,395. Marijuana-linked events would then make up 0.56% of all visits.
78 total hospitals in Colorado, and they chose to study just one? Are the marijuana-linked visits lower in parts of the state that haven't adopted legalized marijuana? How many of these visits were due
solely to marijuana and not other drugs (like pain killers, anti-depressant, or others)?