Friese Bettina, Slater Michael D, Battle Robynn S
Prevention Research Center, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, 180 Grand Avenue, Suite 1200, Oakland, CA, 94612, USA.
Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
J Prim Prev. 2017 Jun;38(3):279-294. doi: 10.1007/s10935-017-0474-7.
We explored how adolescent marijuana edible users differ in regards to marijuana use and related beliefs from marijuana users who do not use edibles. We analyzed California Healthy Kids Survey data collected in one Northern California school district with a racially and ethnically diverse student population. Survey respondents were youth in grades 9-12. Overall, 33% of respondents reported having used marijuana in their lifetime, and 50% of lifetime marijuana users reported using marijuana in the past 30 days. Seventy-two percent of lifetime marijuana users and 82% of past month marijuana users reported having used edibles in their lifetime. Comparing marijuana users who have never used edibles to those users who have, we found that edible users reported using marijuana more frequently in their lifetime. Edible users were also more likely to have used marijuana in the past 30 days, more frequently in the past 30 days, more likely on school property and more frequently on school property. Edible users and non-users differed in their perceptions of risk; edible users were less likely to agree that edible use is very risky. Edible users also reported a younger age of first marijuana use and more attempts to stop using marijuana than non-edible users. Multi-level regression analyses indicate that prevalence of edible use among marijuana users was related to perceived risk of edible use. Perceived risk of edible use among marijuana users was higher among marijuana users who do not use edibles, females, and those youth who perceive school rules to be clear. The findings indicate that prevalence of edible use is high among marijuana users, especially frequent users.
我们探究了青少年大麻食用者在大麻使用及相关观念方面与不食用大麻的使用者有何不同。我们分析了在北加利福尼亚一个学区收集的加利福尼亚健康儿童调查数据,该学区学生种族和民族多样。调查对象为9至12年级的青少年。总体而言,33%的受访者报告称其一生中使用过大麻,而50%的终生大麻使用者报告在过去30天内使用过大麻。72%的终生大麻使用者和82%的过去一个月大麻使用者报告称其一生中食用过大麻。将从未食用过大麻的使用者与食用过大麻的使用者进行比较,我们发现食用者报告其一生中更频繁地使用大麻。食用者在过去30天内也更有可能使用大麻,在过去30天内使用频率更高,在学校场所使用的可能性更大且在学校场所使用频率更高。食用者和非食用者在风险认知方面存在差异;食用者不太可能认同食用大麻风险很大。食用者还报告首次使用大麻的年龄更小,且比非食用者更多次尝试停止使用大麻。多层次回归分析表明,大麻使用者中食用大麻的流行率与对食用大麻风险的认知有关。在不食用大麻的使用者、女性以及那些认为学校规则明确的青少年中,大麻使用者对食用大麻风险的认知更高。研究结果表明,大麻使用者中食用大麻的流行率很高,尤其是频繁使用者。