West Julia C, Peasley-Miklus Catherine, Klemperer Elias M, Priest Jeffrey S, Trutor Megan, Carman Chelsea, Roemhildt Maria, Trites Jeffrey, Villanti Andrea C
Vermont Center on Behavior and Health, Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont Larner College of Medicine.
Department of Psychological Science, University of Vermont.
Cannabis. 2022 Nov 21;5(3):11-22. doi: 10.26828/cannabis/2022.03.002. eCollection 2022.
Cannabis policy evaluations commonly assume equal policy exposure across a state's population using date of implementation as the key independent variable. This study aimed to explore policy knowledge as another measure of exposure and describe the sociodemographic, cognitive, and behavioral correlates of cannabis policy knowledge in young adults in Vermont.
Data are from the PACE Vermont Study (Spring 2019), an online cohort study of Vermonters (12-25). Bivariate and multivariable analyses estimated prevalence ratios (PR) for correlations between knowledge of Vermont's cannabis policy (allowed possession for adults 21 and older) and sociodemographics, cannabis use, and harm perceptions in 1,037 young adults (18-25).
Overall, 60.1% of participants correctly described the state's cannabis policy. Being younger, Hispanic, non-White race, and less educated were inversely correlated with policy knowledge. Ever (PR=1.37; 95% CI 1.16-1.63) and past-30-day cannabis use (PR=1.27; 95% CI 1.12-1.45) were positively correlated with policy knowledge. Policy knowledge was more prevalent among young adults who perceived slight risk of harm from weekly cannabis use (vs. no risk; aPR=1.28; 95% CI 1.11-1.48) or agreed that regular cannabis use early in life can negatively affect attention (vs. disagree; aPR=1.55; 95% CI 1.22-1.97).
Findings suggest that 40% of Vermont young adults in the study were unaware of current state cannabis policy and that policy knowledge was lower in younger, less educated, Hispanic, and non-White young adults. Future research should explore using a measure of policy knowledge as an exposure or moderator variable to better quantify the effects of changes in cannabis legal status on perceptions and use in young people.
大麻政策评估通常假定一个州的全体居民都有相同的政策接触机会,以实施日期作为关键自变量。本研究旨在探讨政策知识作为另一种接触机会的衡量指标,并描述佛蒙特州年轻人中与大麻政策知识相关的社会人口学、认知和行为因素。
数据来自佛蒙特州PACE研究(2019年春季),这是一项针对佛蒙特州居民(12 - 25岁)的在线队列研究。双变量和多变量分析估计了1037名18 - 25岁年轻人中,对佛蒙特州大麻政策(允许21岁及以上成年人持有)的了解与社会人口学、大麻使用及危害认知之间相关性的患病率比(PR)。
总体而言,60.1%的参与者正确描述了该州的大麻政策。年龄较小、西班牙裔、非白人种族以及受教育程度较低与政策知识呈负相关。曾经使用过大麻(PR = 1.37;95%置信区间1.16 - 1.63)和过去30天内使用过大麻(PR = 1.27;95%置信区间1.12 - 1.45)与政策知识呈正相关。政策知识在那些认为每周使用大麻有轻微危害风险(与无风险相比;调整后PR = 1.28;95%置信区间1.11 - 1.48)或同意早年经常使用大麻会对注意力产生负面影响(与不同意相比;调整后PR = 1.55;95%置信区间1.22 - 1.97)的年轻人中更为普遍。
研究结果表明,该研究中40%的佛蒙特州年轻人不知道当前该州的大麻政策,且政策知识在年龄较小、受教育程度较低、西班牙裔和非白人年轻人中较低。未来的研究应探索将政策知识的衡量指标用作接触机会或调节变量,以更好地量化大麻法律地位变化对年轻人认知和使用的影响。