Columbia: Marijuana use significantly increased and its perceived harm decreased
among eighth- and 10th-graders in Washington state following enactment
of recreational marijuana laws, according to a UC Davis and Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health study published online in JAMA Pediatrics. There was no change in use or perceived harm among 12th graders or among similar grades in Colorado. The
authors believe the study is the first in the nation to assess changes
in teens’ perceptions and marijuana use before and after legalized
recreational use, and compare these attitudes and use in 45 other
contiguous states where marijuana use is not legal.
The data
showed that legalization of recreational marijuana use significantly
reduced perceptions of marijuana’s harmfulness by 14 percent and 16
percent among eighth and 10th graders and increased their past-month
marijuana use by 2 percent and 4 percent in Washington state but not in
Colorado. Among states without legalized marijuana use, the perceived
harmfulness also decreased by 5 percent and 7 percent for students in
the two grades, but marijuana use decreased by 1.3 percent and .9
percent. Among older adolescents in Washington state and all adolescents
surveyed in Colorado, there were no changes in perceived harmfulness or
marijuana use in the month after legalization.
The researchers
compared data on the perceived harmfulness of marijuana use to health
and self-reported marijuana use for nearly 254,000 Colorado and
Washington state students in the eighth, 10th and 12th grades who
participated in the Monitoring the Future survey. The survey measures
drug, alcohol and cigarette use and related attitudes among adolescent
students nationwide. The authors compared Washington and Colorado with
45 other states in the contiguous U.S. that did not legalize
recreational marijuana use. In a sensitivity analysis, they also
compared Washington and Colorado data with 20 states with medical
marijuana laws but no recreational marijuana laws; results were
unchanged.
The investigators attribute the lack of change in
attitudes and marijuana use among teens in Colorado after legalization
to a more robust commercialization effort prior to the law taking
effect. Colorado had very developed medical marijuana dispensary
systems before recreational use became legal, with substantial
advertising which youth were exposed to. Colorado also had lower rates
of perceived harmfulness and higher rates of use compared to Washington
state and other states where recreational use is not legal.
“While
legalization for recreational purposes is currently limited to adults,
potential impacts on adolescent marijuana use are of particular
concern,” said Magdalena Cerdá, an epidemiologist with the UC Davis
Violence Prevention Research Program and first author of the study.
“Some adolescents who try marijuana will go on to chronic use, with an
accompanying range of adverse outcomes, from cognitive impairment to
downward social mobility, financial, work-related and relationship
difficulties. We need to better understand the impact of recreational
marijuana use so we’re better prepared to prevent adverse consequences
among the most vulnerable sectors of the population,” Cerdá said.
While
more targeted research is needed to determine the influence of
legalized recreational marijuana use among adolescents and how well the
Washington state and Colorado experiences can be generalized to the rest
of the U.S., the authors believe that states considering legalized
recreational use may also want to consider investing in evidence-based
substance abuse prevention programs for adolescents.
The potential
effect of legalizing marijuana for recreational use has been a topic of
considerable debate since Washington and Colorado first legalized its
use for adults in 2012. Alaska, Oregon and Washington, D.C., followed
suit in 2014, and voters in California, Massachusetts and Nevada
approved recreational use this past November.
“The perceived
harmfulness of marijuana has declined sharply in the U.S. in the last
few years, despite the fact that there are adverse consequences
associated with marijuana use in some adults and in adolescents," said Deborah Hasin, PhD, professor of Epidemiology at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health and in Psychiatry at
Columbia University and principal investigator of the study,
“Epidemiologic monitoring of these consequences as more states legalize
recreational use, and public education about potential health
consequences, are important to protect public health.”
“Our study
suggests that legalization of marijuana in Washington reduced stigma and
perceived risk of use, which could explain why younger adolescents are
using more marijuana after legalization. Other potential reasons for the
increase in use include increased access to marijuana through
third-party purchases, and lower price,” Cerdá said. “Older adolescents
may also have had their attitudes and beliefs about marijuana formed
before recreational marijuana use was legalized, making it less likely
their use would change after legalization.”
The research is funded
with grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse R01DA034244 and
K01DA030449, and from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism K01AA021511.