Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego School of Medicine, San Diego, California.
Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego School of Medicine, San Diego, California.
Am J Prev Med. 2024 Dec;67(6):803-810. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2024.07.021. Epub 2024 Aug 26.
Cannabis use and cannabis use disorder (CUD) are associated with adverse psychosocial outcomes, but their impact on workplace absenteeism remains poorly understood. Moreover, few studies have examined the role of CUD severity. This study aims to address these gaps by examining the associations between cannabis use recency, frequency, CUD severity, and workplace absenteeism.
Cross-sectional data from a U.S. representative sample of full-time employed adults aged ≥18 from the 2021 to 2022 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (N=46,499) were analyzed. The associations between cannabis use recency, past-month cannabis use frequency, CUD severity, and workplace absenteeism (measured by self-reported number of missed days due to illness/injury and skipped work in the last 30 days) were evaluated using negative binomial regression, adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics and other substance use. Data were analyzed in 2023-2024.
An estimated 15.9% of full-time employed adults used cannabis in the past month, with 6.5% meeting CUD criteria. Past-month cannabis use (compared to no lifetime use), more frequent past-month cannabis use (compared to no use in the past month), and each level of CUD (compared to no CUD) were associated with increased incidence of both missing work due to illness/injury and skipping work, with a dose-response relationship observed between CUD severity and skipping work (mild: adjusted incident rate ratio [aIRR]=1.60 [95% confidence interval [CI]=1.24, 2.08]; moderate: aIRR=1.98 [95% CI=1.50, 2.61]); severe (aIRR=2.87 [95% CI=2.12, 3.88]).
Individuals with recent and frequent cannabis use and CUD are disproportionately prone to workplace absenteeism. Results support the enforcement of workplace drug prevention and treatment policies.
大麻使用和大麻使用障碍(CUD)与不良的社会心理后果相关,但它们对工作场所旷工的影响仍知之甚少。此外,很少有研究探讨 CUD 严重程度的作用。本研究旨在通过研究大麻使用的近期、频率、CUD 严重程度与工作场所旷工之间的关系来解决这些差距。
使用 2021 年至 2022 年全国药物使用与健康调查(N=46499)中来自美国的成年全职雇员的代表性横断面数据进行分析。使用负二项回归,调整社会人口统计学特征和其他物质使用情况,评估大麻使用的近期、过去一个月的大麻使用频率、CUD 严重程度与工作场所旷工(通过报告过去 30 天因疾病/受伤而缺勤的天数和旷工天数来衡量)之间的关联。数据分析于 2023-2024 年进行。
估计有 15.9%的全职雇员在过去一个月内使用过大麻,其中 6.5%符合 CUD 标准。与终身未使用相比,过去一个月使用大麻(与过去一个月未使用相比)、更频繁的过去一个月使用大麻(与过去一个月未使用相比),以及每个 CUD 严重程度水平(与无 CUD 相比)与因疾病/受伤而缺勤和旷工的发生率增加有关,CUD 严重程度与旷工之间存在剂量反应关系(轻度:调整后的发病率比[aIRR]=1.60[95%置信区间[CI]=1.24,2.08];中度:aIRR=1.98[95%CI=1.50,2.61];严重:aIRR=2.87[95%CI=2.12,3.88])。
近期和频繁使用大麻且患有 CUD 的个体旷工的可能性不成比例地增加。结果支持执行工作场所药物预防和治疗政策。