Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, New York, New York.
New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2018 May;79(3):423-431. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2018.79.423.
Adult cannabis use has increased in the United States since 2002, particularly after 2007, contrasting with stable/declining trends among youth. We investigated whether specific age groups disproportionately contributed to changes in daily and nondaily cannabis use trends.
Participants ages 12 and older (N = 722,653) from the 2002-2014 National Survey on Drug Use and Health reported past-year cannabis use frequency (i.e., daily = ≥300 days/year; nondaily = 1-299 days/year; none). Multinomial logistic regression was used to model change in past-year daily and nondaily cannabis use prevalence by age group (i.e., 12-17, 18-25, 26-34, 35-49, 50-64, ≥65), before and after 2007. Multinomial logistic regressions estimated change in relative odds of cannabis use frequency over time by age, adjusting for other sociodemographics.
Daily cannabis use prevalence decreased in ages 12-17 before 2007 and increased significantly across adult age categories only after 2007. Increases did not differ significantly across adult ages 18-64 and ranged between 1 and 2 percentage points. Nondaily cannabis use decreased among respondents ages 12-25 and 35-49 before 2007 and increased across adult age categories after 2007, particularly among adults 26-34 (i.e., 4.5 percentage points). Adjusted odds of daily versus nondaily cannabis use increased after 2007 for ages 12-64.
Increases in daily and nondaily cannabis use prevalence after 2007 were specific to adult age groups in the context of increasingly permissive cannabis legislation, attitudes, and lower risk perception. Although any cannabis use may be decreasing among teens, relative odds of more frequent use among users increased in ages 12-64 since 2007. Studies should assess not only any cannabis use, but also frequency of use, to target prevention efforts of adverse effects of cannabis that are especially likely among frequent users.
自 2002 年以来,美国成年人的大麻使用量有所增加,尤其是 2007 年之后,而青少年的大麻使用量则保持稳定/下降。我们研究了特定年龄组是否对大麻每日和非每日使用趋势的变化有不成比例的影响。
来自 2002-2014 年全国毒品使用和健康调查的年龄在 12 岁及以上的参与者(N=722653)报告了过去一年的大麻使用频率(即每日=≥300 天/年;非每日=1-299 天/年;不使用)。使用多项逻辑回归模型来模拟 2007 年前和之后不同年龄组(即 12-17 岁、18-25 岁、26-34 岁、35-49 岁、50-64 岁、≥65 岁)的过去一年中每日和非每日大麻使用流行率的变化。多项逻辑回归估计了随着时间的推移,按年龄调整其他社会人口统计学因素后,大麻使用频率的相对可能性的变化。
2007 年前,12-17 岁年龄组的每日大麻使用流行率下降,而 2007 年后,仅在成年各年龄段显著增加。在成年 18-64 岁年龄段之间,增幅没有显著差异,在 1%到 2%之间。2007 年前,12-25 岁和 35-49 岁年龄组的非每日大麻使用减少,而 2007 年后,所有成年年龄组的非每日大麻使用增加,尤其是 26-34 岁年龄组(即增加了 4.5 个百分点)。2007 年后,12-64 岁年龄组每日与非每日大麻使用的调整后比值增加。
在大麻立法、态度越来越宽松以及风险认知度降低的背景下,2007 年后,每日和非每日大麻使用的流行率增加,这是特定于成年年龄组的。尽管青少年的任何大麻使用都可能在减少,但自 2007 年以来,12-64 岁年龄组的使用者中更频繁使用的相对几率增加了。研究不仅应该评估任何大麻的使用情况,还应该评估使用的频率,以针对大麻的不良影响进行预防,这些影响在频繁使用者中尤其可能发生。