Department of Health Behaviour, Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center, Buffalo, New York, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA.
BMJ Open. 2019 Mar 3;9(3):E024497. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-024497.
Existing evidence shows that co-occurring use of tobacco and cannabis is widespread. Patterns of co-use of tobacco and cannabis may change as more jurisdictions legalise medicinal and/or recreational cannabis sales. This analysis examined predictors of current cannabis use and characterised methods of consumption among smokers and non-smokers in a context where cannabis use is legal.
The 2015 International Tobacco Control Netherlands-Gold Magic Survey conducted between July and August 2015.
Participants (n=1599; 1003 current smokers, 283 former smokers and 390 non-smokers) were asked to report their current (past 30-day) use of cigarettes and cannabis. Cigarette smokers reported whether they primarily used factory made of roll-your-own cigarettes. Those who reported any cannabis use in the last 30 days were asked about forms of cannabis used. Xand logistic regression analyses were used to assess relationships among combustible tobacco and cannabis use.
Past 30-day cannabis use was somewhat higher among current tobacco (or cigarette) smokers (n=57/987=5.8%) than among former or never smokers (n=10/288=3.5% and n=6/316=1.9%, respectively). Joints were the most commonly used form of cannabis use for both current cigarette smokers (96.9%) and non-smokers (76.5%). Among those who smoked cannabis joints, 95% current smokers and 67% of non-smokers reported that they 'always' roll cannabis with tobacco.
In this Netherlands-based sample, most cannabis was reported to be consumed via smoking joints, most often mixed with tobacco. This behaviour may present unique health concerns for non-cigarette smoking cannabis users, since tobacco use could lead to nicotine dependence. Moreover, many non-cigarette smoking cannabis users appear to be misclassified as to their actual tobacco/nicotine exposure.
现有证据表明,烟草和大麻同时使用的现象普遍存在。随着更多司法管辖区使医用和/或娱乐用大麻销售合法化,烟草和大麻同时使用的模式可能会发生变化。本分析旨在研究当前大麻使用的预测因素,并在大麻使用合法的背景下,描述吸烟者和非吸烟者的消费方式。
2015 年 7 月至 8 月期间开展的 2015 年荷兰国际烟草控制-黄金魔术调查。
参与者(n=1599;1003 名当前吸烟者、283 名前吸烟者和 390 名不吸烟者)被要求报告他们过去 30 天内(过去 30 天)使用香烟和大麻的情况。吸烟者报告他们是否主要使用工厂制造的卷烟或自卷香烟。那些在过去 30 天内报告有任何大麻使用的人被问及使用的大麻形式。使用卡方检验和逻辑回归分析评估可燃烟草和大麻使用之间的关系。
过去 30 天内大麻使用情况在当前烟草(或香烟)吸烟者(n=57/987=5.8%)中略高于前吸烟者或从不吸烟者(n=10/288=3.5%和 n=6/316=1.9%)。对于当前吸烟者(96.9%)和非吸烟者(76.5%)来说,大麻最常使用的形式是吸食大麻烟卷。在吸食大麻烟卷的人中,95%的当前吸烟者和 67%的非吸烟者报告他们“总是”将大麻与烟草一起卷起来。
在这个荷兰样本中,大多数大麻被报告通过吸食大麻烟卷消费,最常与烟草混合。这种行为可能对不吸食香烟的大麻使用者带来独特的健康问题,因为烟草使用可能导致尼古丁依赖。此外,许多不吸食香烟的大麻使用者似乎被错误分类为实际的烟草/尼古丁暴露。