Hall Wayne D, Lynskey Michael
Office of Public Policy and Ethics, Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Qld, 4072, Australia.
Drug Alcohol Rev. 2005 Jan;24(1):39-48. doi: 10.1080/09595230500126698.
We outline and evaluate competing explanations of three relationships that have consistently been found between cannabis use and the use of other illicit drugs, namely, (1) that cannabis use typically precedes the use of other illicit drugs; and that (2) the earlier cannabis is used, and (3) the more regularly it is used, the more likely a young person is to use other illicit drugs. We consider three major competing explanations of these patterns: (1) that the relationship is due to the fact that there is a shared illicit market for cannabis and other drugs which makes it more likely that other illicit drugs will be used if cannabis is used; (2) that they are explained by the characteristics of those who use cannabis; and (3) that they reflect a causal relationship in which the pharmacological effects of cannabis on brain function increase the likelihood of using other illicit drugs. These explanations are evaluated in the light of evidence from longitudinal epidemiological studies, simulation studies, discordant twin studies and animal studies. The available evidence indicates that the association reflects in part but is not wholly explained by: (1) the selective recruitment to heavy cannabis use of persons with pre-existing traits (that may be in part genetic) that predispose to the use of a variety of different drugs; (2) the affiliation of cannabis users with drug using peers in settings that provide more opportunities to use other illicit drugs at an earlier age; (3) supported by socialisation into an illicit drug subculture with favourable attitudes towards the use of other illicit drugs. Animal studies have raised the possibility that regular cannabis use may have pharmacological effects on brain function that increase the likelihood of using other drugs. We conclude with suggestions for the type of research studies that will enable a decision to be made about the relative contributions that social context, individual characteristics, and drug effects make to the relationship between cannabis use and the use of other drugs.
我们概述并评估了关于大麻使用与其他非法药物使用之间一直存在的三种关系的相互竞争的解释,即:(1)大麻使用通常先于其他非法药物的使用;(2)大麻使用的时间越早,以及(3)使用的频率越高,年轻人使用其他非法药物的可能性就越大。我们考虑了对这些模式的三种主要相互竞争的解释:(1)这种关系是由于大麻和其他药物存在共同的非法市场,这使得如果使用大麻,使用其他非法药物的可能性更大;(2)它们可以用使用大麻者的特征来解释;(3)它们反映了一种因果关系,即大麻对脑功能的药理作用增加了使用其他非法药物的可能性。根据纵向流行病学研究、模拟研究、异卵双胞胎研究和动物研究的证据对这些解释进行了评估。现有证据表明,这种关联部分反映了但并未完全由以下因素解释:(1)具有预先存在的(可能部分是遗传的)易导致使用多种不同药物的特质的人被选择性招募到大量使用大麻的人群中;(2)大麻使用者在更早的年龄有更多机会使用其他非法药物的环境中与吸毒同伴交往;(3)受到对使用其他非法药物持有利态度的非法药物亚文化的社会化影响。动物研究提出了经常使用大麻可能对脑功能产生药理作用从而增加使用其他药物可能性的可能性。我们最后提出了对研究类型的建议,这些研究将有助于就社会环境、个体特征和药物效应在大麻使用与其他药物使用之间的关系中所起的相对作用做出决策。