Population-level predictions from cannabis risk perceptions to active cannabis use prevalence in the United States, 1991–2014

A mosaic of evidence links risk perceptions with drug use in adolescence, including population summaries to guide public health campaigns, as well as subject-specific estimates on preventing an adolescent's drug use by manipulating that individual's prior risk perceptions. We re-visit thes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Addictive behaviors 2018-07, Vol.82, p.101-104
Hauptverfasser: Parker, Maria A., Anthony, James C.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A mosaic of evidence links risk perceptions with drug use in adolescence, including population summaries to guide public health campaigns, as well as subject-specific estimates on preventing an adolescent's drug use by manipulating that individual's prior risk perceptions. We re-visit these issues with a public health perspective, asking whether population-level cannabis risk perceptions of school-attending adolescents at one grade level might predict cannabis use prevalence two and four grade levels later. From 1991 to 2014, each year's United States “Monitoring the Future” (MTF) study population included 8th-, 10th-, & 12th-graders. Two and four years later, statistically independent school samples of the same cohorts were drawn and assessed (n ~ 16,000/year). Population-level modeling estimated cannabis use prevalence at time “t” (12th-grade) regressed on that same cohort's cannabis risk perceptions as had been measured at time “t-4” (8th-grade) and time “t-2” (10th-grade). Higher cannabis risk perception levels for 10th-graders predict lower cannabis use prevalence when 10th-graders have become 12th-graders (β̂=−0.12), and higher cannabis risk perception levels of 8th-graders predict lower cannabis prevalence when 8th-graders have become 10th-graders (β̂=−0.27); p-values 
ISSN:0306-4603
1873-6327
DOI:10.1016/j.addbeh.2018.02.030