Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 624 North Broadway, 8th Floor, Room 898, Baltimore, MD, 21205-1999, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Prev Sci. 2019 Feb;20(2):194-204. doi: 10.1007/s11121-018-0899-0.
Accurate estimates of substance use in the teenage years by race/ethnicity may help identify when to intervene to prevent long-term substance use disparities. We examined trends in past 30-day use of marijuana, cigarette, and alcohol among 8th, 10th, and 12th graders in Washington State, which passed a recreational marijuana law in 2012 and initiated retail marijuana sales in 2014. Data are from the 2004-2016 Washington Healthy Youth Surveys (n = 161,992). We used time series regression models to assess linear and quadratic trends in substance use for the full sample and stratified on race/ethnicity and grade level and examined relative differences in prevalence of use by race/ethnicity. In Washington, across all racial/ethnic groups, marijuana use peaked in 2012. Although there was not a significant overall change in marijuana use for the full sample across the study period, there was a statistically significant increase in use among 12th graders and a statistically significant decrease among 8th graders. Relative to Whites, Asians had a lower prevalence of marijuana use, whereas all other race/ethnicity groups had a higher prevalence of use. Prevalence of marijuana use is particularly high among American Indian/Alaska Native and Black youth and has increased most rapidly among 12th grade Hispanic/Latinx youth. There were large and statistically significant decreases in alcohol and cigarette use across the study period for the full sample, as well as for each race/ethnicity group. These findings highlight the need for continued monitoring of trends in use among these groups and potentially warrant consideration of selective interventions that specifically focus on students of color and that include developmentally-appropriate strategies relevant to each grade.
准确估计青少年的物质使用情况(按种族/族裔划分),可能有助于确定何时进行干预,以防止长期存在的物质使用差异。我们研究了 2012 年华盛顿州通过休闲用大麻法和 2014 年开始零售大麻销售后,8 年级、10 年级和 12 年级学生过去 30 天内吸食大麻、香烟和酒精的趋势。数据来自 2004-2016 年华盛顿健康青年调查(n=161992)。我们使用时间序列回归模型评估了全样本的线性和二次趋势,并按种族/族裔和年级进行分层,检查了种族/族裔差异与使用流行率的相对差异。在华盛顿,所有种族/族裔群体的大麻使用率在 2012 年达到峰值。尽管在整个研究期间,全样本的大麻使用率没有明显的总体变化,但 12 年级学生的使用率呈上升趋势,8 年级学生的使用率呈下降趋势,具有统计学意义。与白人相比,亚洲人的大麻使用率较低,而其他所有种族/族裔群体的使用率都较高。美洲印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民和黑人青年的大麻使用率特别高,而西班牙裔/拉丁裔青年的使用率增长最快。全样本以及每个种族/族裔群体的酒精和香烟使用率在整个研究期间都大幅下降,且具有统计学意义。这些发现强调了需要继续监测这些群体中使用趋势的必要性,并且可能需要考虑有针对性的干预措施,这些措施特别关注有色人种学生,并包括与每个年级相关的发展适当的策略。