Social Development Research Group, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Social Development Research Group, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Am J Prev Med. 2020 Sep;59(3):309-316. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2020.04.008. Epub 2020 Jul 9.
Rates of adolescent substance use have decreased in recent years. Knowing whether nonmedical marijuana legalization for adults is linked to increases or slows desirable decreases in marijuana and other drug use or pro-marijuana attitudes among teens is of critical interest to inform policy and promote public health. This study tests whether nonmedical marijuana legalization predicts a higher likelihood of teen marijuana, alcohol, or cigarette use or lower perceived harm from marijuana use in a longitudinal sample of youth aged 10-20 years.
Data were drawn from the Seattle Social Development Project-The Intergenerational Project, an accelerated longitudinal study of youth followed both before (2002-2011) and after nonmedical marijuana legalization (2015-2018). Analyses included 281 youth surveyed up to 10 times and living in a state with nonmedical marijuana legalization between 2015 and 2018 (51% female; 33% white, 17% African American, 10% Asian/Pacific Islander, and 40% mixed race or other).
Multilevel modeling in 2019 showed that nonmedical marijuana legalization predicted a higher likelihood of self-reported past-year marijuana (AOR=6.85, p=0.001) and alcohol use (AOR 3.38, p=0.034) among youth when controlling birth cohort, sex, race, and parent education. Nonmedical marijuana legalization was not significantly related to past-year cigarette use (AOR=2.43, p=0.279) or low perceived harm from marijuana use (AOR=1.50, p=0.236) across youth aged 10-20 years.
It is important to consider recent broad declines in youth substance use when evaluating the impact of nonmedical marijuana legalization. States that legalize nonmedical marijuana for adults should increase resources for the prevention of underage marijuana and alcohol use.
近年来,青少年物质使用的比例有所下降。了解成人非医用大麻合法化是否会增加或减缓青少年大麻和其他药物使用或对大麻的态度的理想下降,对于为政策提供信息并促进公共卫生至关重要。本研究在一个年龄在 10-20 岁的青少年纵向样本中测试了非医用大麻合法化是否预示着青少年大麻、酒精或香烟使用的可能性更高,或对大麻使用的感知危害更低。
数据来自西雅图社会发展项目——代际项目,这是一项对青少年进行的加速纵向研究,在非医用大麻合法化之前(2002-2011 年)和之后(2015-2018 年)都进行了调查。分析包括 281 名在 2015 年至 2018 年期间生活在非医用大麻合法化州的青少年,他们接受了多达 10 次调查(51%为女性;33%为白人,17%为非裔美国人,10%为亚太裔,40%为混血或其他种族)。
2019 年的多层次模型显示,在控制出生队列、性别、种族和父母教育程度后,非医用大麻合法化预示着青少年自我报告的过去一年大麻(AOR=6.85,p=0.001)和酒精使用(AOR 3.38,p=0.034)的可能性更高。非医用大麻合法化与青少年过去一年的香烟使用(AOR=2.43,p=0.279)或对大麻使用的低感知危害(AOR=1.50,p=0.236)之间没有显著关系。
在评估成人非医用大麻合法化的影响时,考虑到青少年物质使用最近的广泛下降是很重要的。将非医用大麻合法化的州应增加预防未成年人使用大麻和酒精的资源。