Impact of Medical Marijuana Laws on State-Level Marijuana Use by Age and Gender, 2004–2013

In states that have passed medical marijuana laws (MMLs), marijuana use (MU) increased after MML enactment among people ages 26 and older, but not among ages 12–25. We examined whether the age-specific impact of MMLs on MU varied by gender. Data were obtained from the 2004–2013 restricted-use Nation...

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Veröffentlicht in:Prevention science 2019-02, Vol.20 (2), p.205-214
Hauptverfasser: Mauro, Christine M., Newswanger, Paul, Santaella-Tenorio, Julian, Mauro, Pia M., Carliner, Hannah, Martins, Silvia S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In states that have passed medical marijuana laws (MMLs), marijuana use (MU) increased after MML enactment among people ages 26 and older, but not among ages 12–25. We examined whether the age-specific impact of MMLs on MU varied by gender. Data were obtained from the 2004–2013 restricted-use National Survey on Drug Use and Health, aggregated at the state level. The exposure was a time-varying indicator of state-level MML (0 = No Law, 1 = Before Law, 2 = After Law). Outcomes included past-month MU prevalence, daily MU prevalence among past-year users (i.e., 300+ days/year), and past-year marijuana use disorder (MUD) prevalence. Linear models tested the state-level MML effect on outcomes by age (12–17, 18–25, 26+) and gender. Models included a state-level random intercept and controlled for time- and state-level covariates. Past-month MU did not increase after enactment of MML in men or women ages 12–25. Among people 26+, past-month MU increased for men from 7.0% before to 8.7% after enactment (+ 1.7%, p  
ISSN:1389-4986
1573-6695
DOI:10.1007/s11121-017-0848-3