Erowid
 
 
Plants - Drugs Mind - Spirit Freedom - Law Arts - Culture Library  
Erowid References Database
Degenhardt L, Coffey C, Romaniuk H, Swift W, Carlin JB, Hall WD, Patton GC. 
“The persistence of the association between adolescent cannabis use and common mental disorders into young adulthood”. 
Addiction. 2012 Jul 10.
Abstract
AIMS: Debate continues about whether the association between cannabis use in adolescence and common mental disorders is causal. Most reports have focused on associations in adolescence, with few studies extending into adulthood. We examine the association from adolescence until the age of 29 years in a representative prospective cohort of young Australians.

DESIGN: Nine-wave, 15-year representative longitudinal cohort study, with six waves of data collection in adolescence (mean age 14.9 to 17.4 years) and three in young adulthood (mean age 20.7, 24.1 and 29.1 years).

PARTICIPANTS:Participants were a cohort of 1943 recruited in secondary school and surveyed at each wave when possible from mid-teen age to their late twenties.

SETTING: Victoria, Australia.

MEASUREMENTS: Psychiatric morbidity was assessed with the Revised Clinical Interview Schedule (CIS-R) at each adolescent wave, and as CIDI-defined ICD-10 major depressive episode and anxiety disorder at 29 years. Frequency of cannabis use was measured in the past six months in adolescence. Cannabis use frequency in the last year and DSM-IV cannabis dependence were assessed at 29 years. Cross-sectional and prospective associations of these outcomes with cannabis use and dependence were estimated as odds ratios, using multivariable logistic regression models, with the outcomes of interest MDE and AD at 29 years.

FINDINGS: There were no consistent associations between adolescent cannabis use and depression at age 29 years. Daily cannabis use was associated with anxiety disorder at 29 years (adjusted OR 2.5, 95%CI 1.2-5.2), as was cannabis dependence (adjusted OR 2.2, 95%CI 1.1-4.4). Among weekly+ adolescent cannabis users, those who continued to use cannabis use at 29 years remained at significantly increased odds of anxiety disorder (adjusted OR 3.2, 95%CI 1.1-9.2). CONCLUSIONS: Regular (particularly daily) adolescent cannabis use is consistently associated with anxiety, but not depressive disorder, in adolescence and late young adulthood, even among regular users who then cease using the drug. It is possible that early cannabis exposure causes enduring mental health risks in the general cannabis using adolescent population.
Comments and Responses to this Article
#
Submit Comment
[ Cite HTML ]