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Differences in patterns of cannabis use among youth: Prevalence, perceptions of harm and driving under the influence in the USA where non‐medical cannabis markets have been established, proposed and prohibited
Author(s) -
Wadsworth Elle,
Hammond David
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
drug and alcohol review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.018
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1465-3362
pISSN - 0959-5236
DOI - 10.1111/dar.12842
Subject(s) - cannabis , harm , perception , medical cannabis , psychiatry , medicine , psychology , environmental health , social psychology , neuroscience
Abstract Introduction and Aims Cannabis use is the most widely used illicit substance in the USA. Currently, over half of US jurisdictions have legalised medical cannabis and nine US jurisdictions (and Washington DC) have legalised non‐medical cannabis. Comparisons across jurisdictions can help to evaluate the impact of these policies. The current study examined patterns of cannabis use among youth in three categories: (i) states that have legalised non‐medical cannabis with established markets; (ii) jurisdictions that recently legalised non‐medical cannabis without established markets; and (iii) all other jurisdictions where non‐medical cannabis is prohibited. Design and Methods Data come from an online survey conducted among 4097 US youth aged 16–19 recruited through a commercial panel in July/August 2017. Regression models were fitted to examine differences between regulatory categories for cannabis consumption, perceived access to cannabis, modes of use, perceptions of harm and cannabis‐impaired driving. All estimates represent weighted data. Results States that had legalised non‐medical cannabis had higher prevalence, easier access and lower driving rates than non‐legal states. There were few differences between states with established non‐medical cannabis markets and those that had recently legalised. Discussion and Conclusions Cannabis use among youth was higher in states that have legalised non‐medical cannabis, regardless of how long the policy had been implemented or whether markets had been established. This suggests that differences between states with and without legal non‐medical cannabis may partly be due to longer‐term patterns established prior and highlights the importance of longitudinal evidence to evaluate the impact of cannabis policies.