Montreal: Responding to rapidly shifting legal and cultural environments,
researchers at the University of Montreal and CHU Sainte-Justine
Children's Hospital have found a way to prevent, reduce or delay
cannabis use amongst some at-risk youth. Cannabis users are at risk of
neurocognitive deficits, reduced educational and occupational
attainment, motor vehicle accidents, exacerbation of psychiatric
symptoms, and precipitation of psychosis. Adolescents are particularly
at risk due to the developing nature of their brain. Youth who have used
marijuana have been shown to have less ability to sustain their
attention and control their impulse control and have impaired cognitive
processes.
“Marijuana use is highly prevalent among teenagers in North
America and Europe,” explained Dr. Patricia Conrod, who led the study.
“As attitudes and laws towards marijuana are changing, it is important
to find ways to prevent and reduce its use amongst at-risk youth. Our
study reveals that targeted, brief interventions by trained teachers can
achieve that goal.”
The study involved working with 1,038 high-risk British students and
their teachers at 21 secondary schools in London. The children, who were
in ninth grade (Year 10), were identified as being at high-risk by
their responses to a clinically-validated personality assessment. People
who are sensitive to anxiety or negative thinking, or who are impulsive
or sensation-seeking are known to be at greater risk of substance
abuse. “The students voluntarily participated in two 90-minute cognitive
behavioural sessions that were adapted to their specific personality
type. These sessions involved learning from real-life scenarios
described by other at risk youth, and were designed to show how people
manage risk. Cannabis was not directly mentioned but was discussed if
the students brought it up,” explained Ioan T. Mahu, first author of the
study. “There were signs that the programme delayed onset and reduced
frequency of cannabis use in all youth who participated in the
interventions, but the results also consistently showed that the
programme was particularly effective in preventing cannabis use among
those most at risk of using – sensation seekers,” said Dr. Conrod.
Approximately 25% of high risk youth took up cannabis use over the
course of this two-year trial. The intervention was associated with a
33 % reduction in cannabis use rates within the first six months after
the intervention and then reduced frequency of use another six months
later. “Within the group at greatest risk for cannabis use, sensation
seekers, the intervention was associated with a 75% reduction in rates
of cannabis use six months post intervention, as well as significant
reductions in frequency of use thereafter,” Dr. Conrod exclaimed. Drug
use was ascertained by the use of anonymous questionnaires that the
participants filled out every six months over the two years following
the start of the study. The assessment protocol included a number of
procedures to filter out students reporting incorrect information.
Sensation-seekers are people who require a lot of stimulation, and
they are willing to take greater risks than most people to obtain
experience excitement. They also tend to be less inhibited and less
tolerant of boredom. “Sensation seekers are particularly at risk of
cannabis use amongst this young age group. It is possible that other
personality traits predict cannabis use at older ages,” Mahu said.
“Future studies should look at the motivations for cannabis use amongst
people with other at-risk personality types in order to develop
intervention programmes that are as effective as this one has been for
sensation seekers.
According to Senior Author Dr. Conrod, “given the well documented and
deleterious effects of early-onset marijuana use among teens,
prevention and delay of this behaviour is of utmost importance for the
public, particularly as society experiments with different public
policies to regulate cannabis-related harm to society.”