Silins Edmund, Fergusson David M, Patton George C, Horwood L John, Olsson Craig A, Hutchinson Delyse M, Degenhardt Louisa, Tait Robert J, Borschmann Rohan, Coffey Carolyn, Toumbourou John W, Najman Jake M, Mattick Richard P
National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, UNSW Australia, Sydney, Australia.
Christchurch Health and Development Study, Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2015 Nov 1;156:90-96. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2015.08.034. Epub 2015 Sep 12.
The relative contributions of cannabis and alcohol use to educational outcomes are unclear. We examined the extent to which adolescent cannabis or alcohol use predicts educational attainment in emerging adulthood.
Participant-level data were integrated from three longitudinal studies from Australia and New Zealand (Australian Temperament Project, Christchurch Health and Development Study, and Victorian Adolescent Health Cohort Study). The number of participants varied by analysis (N=2179-3678) and were assessed on multiple occasions between ages 13 and 25. We described the association between frequency of cannabis or alcohol use prior to age 17 and high school non-completion, university non-enrolment, and degree non-attainment by age 25. Two other measures of alcohol use in adolescence were also examined.
After covariate adjustment using a propensity score approach, adolescent cannabis use (weekly+) was associated with 1½ to two-fold increases in the odds of high school non-completion (OR=1.60, 95% CI=1.09-2.35), university non-enrolment (OR=1.51, 95% CI=1.06-2.13), and degree non-attainment (OR=1.96, 95% CI=1.36-2.81). In contrast, adjusted associations for all measures of adolescent alcohol use were inconsistent and weaker. Attributable risk estimates indicated adolescent cannabis use accounted for a greater proportion of the overall rate of non-progression with formal education than adolescent alcohol use.
Findings are important to the debate about the relative harms of cannabis and alcohol use. Adolescent cannabis use is a better marker of lower educational attainment than adolescent alcohol use and identifies an important target population for preventive intervention.
大麻和酒精使用对教育成果的相对影响尚不清楚。我们研究了青少年使用大麻或酒精在多大程度上能够预测成年早期的教育成就。
整合了来自澳大利亚和新西兰的三项纵向研究(澳大利亚气质项目、克赖斯特彻奇健康与发展研究以及维多利亚青少年健康队列研究)的参与者层面数据。参与者数量因分析而异(N = 2179 - 3678),并在13至25岁之间多次接受评估。我们描述了17岁之前大麻或酒精使用频率与未完成高中学业、未进入大学以及25岁时未获得学位之间的关联。还研究了青少年酒精使用的另外两项指标。
使用倾向得分法进行协变量调整后,青少年使用大麻(每周及以上)与未完成高中学业(OR = 1.60,95% CI = 1.09 - 2.35)、未进入大学(OR = 1.51,95% CI = 1.06 - 2.13)以及未获得学位(OR = 1.96,95% CI = 1.36 - 2.8