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Marijuana Use among Young Adults: Findings from the 2015-2018 National Survey on Drug Use and Health
Author(s) -
R. Andrew Yockey,
Shanna D. Stryker
Publication year - 2021
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.26828/cannabis.2021.01.000.1
Subject(s) - harm reduction , monitoring the future , medicine , environmental health , logistic regression , drug , lesbian , young adult , harm , national health interview survey , demography , public health , psychology , substance abuse , psychiatry , gerontology , social psychology , population , nursing , sociology , psychoanalysis
Marijuana is the most commonly used drug for young adults. A greater understanding of risk factors associated with recent use can inform health prevention messaging. Pooled data from the 2015-2018 National Survey on Drug Use and Health were utilized among 89,446 individuals ages 18-34. Weighted logistic regression analyses, controlling for covariates, were utilized to determine conditional associations to past-30-day use. A sizeable percentage (18.5%) of individuals reported smoking marijuana in the past 30 days. Individuals who identify as African American or Multi-Racial, Gay/Lesbian, Bisexual, reported their health as poor, not covered by health insurance, reported prior drug use, or who had reported any thoughts/plans of suicide were at risk for use. Of concern, high rates of alcohol (14.7%) and cocaine (1.50%) were found among users. We believe our findings can inform harm reduction efforts and policy creation.

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