Department of Counseling Developmental, Educational Psychology, Lynch School of Education and Human Development, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts.
Department of Counseling Developmental, Educational Psychology, Lynch School of Education and Human Development, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts.
J Adolesc Health. 2021 Jul;69(1):41-49. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2020.10.019. Epub 2020 Nov 23.
Given the rapid expansion of recreational marijuana legalization (RML) polices, it is essential to assess whether such policies are associated with shifts in the use of marijuana and other substances, particularly for adolescents, who are uniquely susceptible to negative repercussions of marijuana use. This analysis seeks to provide greater generalizability, specificity, and methodological rigor than limited prior evidence.
Youth Risk Behavior Survey data from 47 states from 1999 to 2017 assessed marijuana, alcohol, cigarette, and e-cigarette use among adolescents (14-18+ years; N = 1,077,938). Associations between RML and adolescent past-month substance use were analyzed using quasi-experimental difference-in-differences zero-inflated negative binomial models.
Controlling for other state substance policies, year and state fixed effects, and adolescent demographic characteristics, models found that RML was not associated with a significant shift in the likelihood of marijuana use but predicted a small significant decline in the level of marijuana use among users (incidence rate ratio = .844, 95% confidence interval [.720-.989]) and a small increase in the likelihood of any e-cigarette use (odds ratio of zero use = .647, 95% confidence interval [.515-.812]). Patterns did not vary over adolescent age or sex, with minimal differences across racial/ethnic groups.
Results suggest minimal short-term effects of RML on adolescent substance use, with small declines in marijuana use and increase in the likelihood of any e-cigarette use. Given the delayed rollout of commercial marijuana sales in RML states and rapid expansion of RML policies, ongoing assessment of the consequences for adolescent substance use and related health and behavioral repercussions is essential.
鉴于娱乐用大麻合法化政策的迅速扩张,评估这些政策是否与大麻和其他物质的使用变化相关至关重要,特别是对于青少年而言,他们对大麻使用的负面影响尤为敏感。本分析旨在提供比有限的先前证据更具普遍性、特异性和方法学严谨性的证据。
利用 1999 年至 2017 年来自 47 个州的青少年风险行为调查数据(年龄 14-18+岁;N=1077938),评估青少年过去一个月内大麻、酒精、香烟和电子烟的使用情况。采用准实验差分差异零膨胀负二项模型分析大麻合法化与青少年过去一个月物质使用之间的关联。
在控制其他州物质政策、年份和州固定效应以及青少年人口统计学特征的情况下,模型发现大麻合法化与大麻使用可能性的显著变化无关,但预测大麻使用者的大麻使用水平略有显著下降(发生率比=0.844,95%置信区间[0.720-0.989]),以及任何电子烟使用可能性略有增加(零使用的比值比=0.647,95%置信区间[0.515-0.812])。这些模式在青少年年龄或性别上没有差异,在不同种族/族裔群体之间差异极小。
结果表明大麻合法化对青少年物质使用的短期影响极小,大麻使用略有下降,任何电子烟使用的可能性略有增加。鉴于商业大麻销售在大麻合法化州的推出延迟以及大麻合法化政策的迅速扩张,持续评估这些政策对青少年物质使用及相关健康和行为后果至关重要。