Journal article
Cannabis and progression to other substance use in young adults: Findings from a 13-year prospective population-based study
W Swift, C Coffey, L Degenhardt, JB Carlin, H Romaniuk, GC Patton
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | Published : 2012
Abstract
Background Adolescent cannabis use predicts the onset of later illicit drug use. In contrast, little is known about whether cannabis in young adulthood also predicts subsequent progression or cessation of licit or illicit drug use. Methods 13-year longitudinal cohort study with recruitment in secondary school students in Victoria, Australia. There were six waves of adolescent data collection (mean age 14.9-17.4 years) followed by three in young adulthood (mean age 20.7, 24.1 and 29.0 years). Discrete-time proportional hazards models were used to assess predictive associations between cannabis use frequency (occasional (< weekly), weekly to less than daily and daily) in 1756 participants in e..
View full abstractGrants
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council and the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. LD was supported by a Senior Research Fellowship, National Health and Medical Research Council. GCP was supported by a Senior Principal Research Fellowship, National Health and Medical Research Council.