National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2010 Apr 1;108(1-2):84-97. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2009.12.001. Epub 2010 Jan 8.
It is unclear whether the normative sequence of drug use initiation, beginning with tobacco and alcohol, progressing to cannabis and then other illicit drugs, is due to causal effects of specific earlier drug use promoting progression, or to influences of other variables such as drug availability and attitudes. One way to investigate this is to see whether risk of later drug use in the sequence, conditional on use of drugs earlier in the sequence, changes according to time-space variation in use prevalence. We compared patterns and order of initiation of alcohol, tobacco, cannabis, and other illicit drug use across 17 countries with a wide range of drug use prevalence.
Analyses used data from World Health Organization (WHO) World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys, a series of parallel community epidemiological surveys using the same instruments and field procedures carried out in 17 countries throughout the world.
Initiation of "gateway" substances (i.e. alcohol, tobacco and cannabis) was differentially associated with subsequent onset of other illicit drug use based on background prevalence of gateway substance use. Cross-country differences in substance use prevalence also corresponded to differences in the likelihood of individuals reporting a non-normative sequence of substance initiation.
These results suggest the "gateway" pattern at least partially reflects unmeasured common causes rather than causal effects of specific drugs on subsequent use of others. This implies that successful efforts to prevent use of specific "gateway" drugs may not in themselves lead to major reductions in the use of later drugs.
目前尚不清楚,从使用烟草和酒精开始,继而使用大麻,再使用其他非法药物的这种药物使用初始顺序是否是由于特定早期药物使用对后续使用的促进作用导致的因果效应,或者是由于药物供应和态度等其他变量的影响。一种研究方法是,观察在该序列中,根据药物使用的时间和空间变化,后续药物使用的风险是否会发生变化,从而确定条件概率。我们比较了在药物使用流行率范围广泛的 17 个国家中,酒精、烟草、大麻和其他非法药物使用的起始模式和顺序。
分析使用了世界卫生组织(WHO)世界心理健康调查(WMH)的数据,这是一项在全世界 17 个国家进行的一系列平行社区流行病学调查,使用相同的工具和现场程序。
“入门”物质(即酒精、烟草和大麻)的使用起始与随后其他非法药物使用的发生之间存在差异,这取决于入门物质使用的背景流行率。各国之间药物使用流行率的差异也反映了个人报告非规范物质起始顺序的可能性存在差异。
这些结果表明,“入门”模式至少部分反映了未被测量的共同原因,而不是特定药物对后续使用其他药物的因果效应。这意味着,成功预防特定“入门”药物的使用本身可能不会导致后期药物使用的大幅减少。