Increasing number of US adults using
marijuana as fewer people perceive the drug as harmful
By
Dr.Fourkan Ali
An increasing number
of US adults are using marijuana, as fewer people perceive the drug as harmful,
according to a survey of over 500000 US adults conducted between 2002 and 2014.
As marijuana has become increasingly potent over the past decade, the authors
say that the findings suggest the need for improved education and prevention
messages regarding the risks of marijuana.
An increasing number
of US adults are using marijuana, as fewer people perceive the drug as harmful,
according to a survey of over 500000 US adults conducted between 2002 and 2014
published in The Lancet Psychiatry. As marijuana has become increasingly potent over the
past decade, the authors say that the findings suggest the need for improved
education and prevention messages regarding the risks of marijuana.
While the study did
not find an increase in the overall prevalence of marijuana use disorders
(marijuana abuse or dependence) among US adults, it was not able to fully
assess the impact of recent changes to state-level cannabis laws on widening
use, and the authors say that continued monitoring of marijuana use and
disorders at national and state-level is needed.
The authors note that
the study did not look at use among children or teenagers, or the link between
marijuana use and other more severe psychiatric disorders.
The study analysed
data from 596500 adults aged 18 or older who took part in the annual US
National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) from 2002 to 2014. Marijuana use
(defined as having used marijuana in the previous year) increased from 10.4% in
2002 to 13.3% in 2014. The proportion of adults who first started using
marijuana in the previous year increased from 0.7% in 2002 to 1.1% in 2014. The
prevalence of daily or near daily use (defined as people who reported using
marijuana on average 5 days or more per week) increased from 1.9% to 3.5% over
the same period.
This increase was
associated with a decrease in the proportion of people perceiving great risk of
harm from smoking marijuana once or twice a week from 50.4% to 33.3%. Changes
in marijuana use and perception of harm generally began in 2007. The prevalence
of marijuana use disorders (abuse or dependence) among adults in the general
population remained stable at about 1.5% between 2002 and 2014, and the
prevalence of marijuana use disorders among users declined (14.8% to 11%).
The authors suggest
this may be because the large number of people who have started using marijuana
in the past year might be using the drug less frequently and have less
psychopathology than people who have used marijuana for longer.
Extrapolating this to
the US population, the authors estimate that the number of adults who first
used marijuana increased from 823000 in 2002 to 1.4 million in 2014 and that
the overall number of marijuana users increased from 21.9 to 31.9 million. They
estimate that the number of daily or near daily users was 8.4 million 2014, an
increase from 3.9 million in 2002.
"Although shifts
in perceived risk have historically been important predictors of adolescent
marijuana trends, no previous research has examined this relationship in
adults. State laws related to marijuana use in the USA have changed considerably
over the past 20 years with medical marijuana now legalized in 25 states and
the District of Columbia. Additionally, several jurisdictions have legalized
non-medical marijuana use," says study author Dr Wilson M. Compton,
National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health, USA.
"Understanding
patterns of marijuana use and dependence, and how these have changed over time
is essential for policy makers who continue to consider whether and how to
modify laws related to marijuana and for health-care practitioners who care for
patients using marijuana. Perceived risk of marijuana use is associated with
high frequency of use suggesting the potential value for modifying risk
perceptions of marijuana use in adults through effective education and
prevention messages," he adds.
People who used
marijuana were more likely to develop dependence if they were male, younger,
had low education, were not in full time employment, had depression and used
tobacco or other substances.
The authors note that
the NSDUH relies on a large sample size and that the questionnaire content has
remained unchanged since 2002, but as with any self-reported survey, answers
may be subject to recall bias. The study did not include people who were
homeless, living in shelters or who were incarcerated, meaning that rates of
drug use and drug use disorders could be even higher. Importantly, the study
did not look at other psychiatric disorders (such as psychosis or
schizophrenia) so cannot provide information on the link between more severe
psychiatric disorders and marijuana use.
Writing in a linked
Comment, Professor Wayne Hall, University of Queensland, Australia, says:
"These changes in the prevalence of cannabis use occurred during a period
when many US states legalised cannabis for medicinal use, but before four
states went on to legalise recreational cannabis use (after 2014). It is
probably too soon to draw conclusions about the effects of these legal changes
on rates of cannabis use and cannabis related harms, but it is likely that
these policy changes will increase the prevalence and frequency of cannabis use
and, potentially, cannabis use disorders in the longer term. To investigate
this possibility, the USA needs to continue to monitor cannabis use and
disorders in large scale surveys, such as the National Survey on Drug Use and
Health and the Monitoring the Future national survey of high school students.
Monitoring of cannabis use will need to address one of the major limitations of
these surveys for this task, namely, that they were designed to provide
nationally representative samples and do not necessarily provide representative
samples of individual states. US Federal funding agencies should consider
funding oversampling of representative population samples within states that
have and have not legalised cannabis for recreational and medical use."
Story
Source:
The above post is
reprinted from materials provided by The Lancet. Note: Content may be edited for style
and length.
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