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Cannabis use among youth in the United States, 2004–2016: Faster rate of increase among youth with depression

•We examined cannabis use by depression among US youth from 2004 to 2016.•Youth with depression were twice as likely to report cannabis use in 2016.•From 2004 to 2016, cannabis use increased among youth with and without depression.•Cannabis use increased significantly more rapidly among youth with d...

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Published in:Drug and alcohol dependence 2020-04, Vol.209, p.107894, Article 107894
Main Authors: Weinberger, Andrea H., Zhu, Jiaqi, Lee, Joun, Anastasiou, Elle, Copeland, Jan, Goodwin, Renee D.
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Language:English
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description •We examined cannabis use by depression among US youth from 2004 to 2016.•Youth with depression were twice as likely to report cannabis use in 2016.•From 2004 to 2016, cannabis use increased among youth with and without depression.•Cannabis use increased significantly more rapidly among youth with depression. Cannabis use has significant negative consequences for youth. Depression is associated with greater cannabis use among adults but less is known about cannabis use and depression among youth. This study investigated whether depression is associated with increased cannabis use among youth in the United States (US), overall and by demographics, and examined trends in cannabis use by depression status among youth from 2004 to 2016. Data were from the 2004–2016 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), annual cross-sectional national samples of US persons 12 and older. The analytic sample included respondents aged 12–17 (total combined n=204,102). First, the prevalence of past-month cannabis use by past-year depression status among youth was examined, overall and by demographic subgroups, using pooled data from 2004–2016. Next, linear time trends of past-month cannabis use were assessed by depression status from 2004 to 2016 using logistic regression models with continuous year as the predictor. Models with year-by-depression status interaction terms assessed differential time trends for those with and without depression. From 2004–2016, cannabis use increased both among youth with and without depression. Cannabis use increased significantly more rapidly among youth with (8.45% to 11.65%), compared to without, depression (4.28% to 4.71%). Youth with depression were more than twice as likely to report cannabis use (12.86% versus 6.40%), relative to those without depression. Cannabis use was more than twice as common and increased more rapidly from 2004 to 2016 among youth with depression compared to youth without depression.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2020.107894
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Cannabis use has significant negative consequences for youth. Depression is associated with greater cannabis use among adults but less is known about cannabis use and depression among youth. This study investigated whether depression is associated with increased cannabis use among youth in the United States (US), overall and by demographics, and examined trends in cannabis use by depression status among youth from 2004 to 2016. Data were from the 2004–2016 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), annual cross-sectional national samples of US persons 12 and older. The analytic sample included respondents aged 12–17 (total combined n=204,102). First, the prevalence of past-month cannabis use by past-year depression status among youth was examined, overall and by demographic subgroups, using pooled data from 2004–2016. Next, linear time trends of past-month cannabis use were assessed by depression status from 2004 to 2016 using logistic regression models with continuous year as the predictor. Models with year-by-depression status interaction terms assessed differential time trends for those with and without depression. From 2004–2016, cannabis use increased both among youth with and without depression. Cannabis use increased significantly more rapidly among youth with (8.45% to 11.65%), compared to without, depression (4.28% to 4.71%). Youth with depression were more than twice as likely to report cannabis use (12.86% versus 6.40%), relative to those without depression. 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Next, linear time trends of past-month cannabis use were assessed by depression status from 2004 to 2016 using logistic regression models with continuous year as the predictor. Models with year-by-depression status interaction terms assessed differential time trends for those with and without depression. From 2004–2016, cannabis use increased both among youth with and without depression. Cannabis use increased significantly more rapidly among youth with (8.45% to 11.65%), compared to without, depression (4.28% to 4.71%). Youth with depression were more than twice as likely to report cannabis use (12.86% versus 6.40%), relative to those without depression. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); ScienceDirect Freedom Collection; ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Adolescent
Adolescents
Cannabis
Child
Child & adolescent psychiatry
Cross-Sectional Studies
Demographics
Demography
Depression
Depression - diagnosis
Depression - epidemiology
Depression - psychology
Drug abuse
Epidemiology
Female
Health Surveys - trends
Humans
Interaction terms
Male
Marijuana
Marijuana Use - epidemiology
Marijuana Use - psychology
Marijuana Use - trends
Mental depression
NSDUH
Polls & surveys
Regression analysis
Regression models
Subgroups
Trends
United States - epidemiology
Youth
title Cannabis use among youth in the United States, 2004–2016: Faster rate of increase among youth with depression
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