New UNH Research Shows Risk Of Marijuana's 'Gateway Effect' Overblown
Main Category: Alcohol / Addiction / Illegal DrugsAlso Included In: Pediatrics / Children's Health
Article Date: 03 Sep 2010 - 1:00 PDT
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New research from the University of New Hampshire shows that the "gateway effect" of marijuana - that teenagers who use marijuana are more likely to move on to harder illicit drugs as young adults - is overblown.
Whether teenagers who smoked pot will use other illicit drugs as young adults has more to do with life factors such as employment status and stress, according to the new research. In fact, the strongest predictor of whether someone will use other illicit drugs is their race/ethnicity, not whether they ever used marijuana.
Conducted by UNH associate professors of sociology Karen Van Gundy and Cesar Rebellon, the research appears in the September 2010, issue of the Journal of Health and Social Behavior in the article, "A Life-course Perspective on the 'Gateway Hypothesis.' "
"In light of these findings, we urge U.S. drug control policymakers to consider stress and life-course approaches in their pursuit of solutions to the 'drug problem,' " Van Gundy and Rebellon say.
The researchers used survey data from 1,286 young adults who attended Miami-Dade public schools in the 1990s. Within the final sample, 26 percent of the respondents are African American, 44 percent are Hispanic, and 30 percent are non-Hispanic white.
The researchers found that young adults who did not graduate from high school or attend college were more likely to have used marijuana as teenagers and other illicit substances in young adulthood. In addition, those who used marijuana as teenagers and were unemployed following high school were more likely to use other illicit drugs.
However, the association between teenage marijuana use and other illicit drug abuse by young adults fades once stresses, such as unemployment, diminish.
"Employment in young adulthood can protect people by 'closing' the marijuana gateway, so over-criminalizing youth marijuana use might create more serious problems if it interferes with later employment opportunities," Van Gundy says.
In addition, once young adults reach age 21, the gateway effect subsides entirely.
"While marijuana use may serve as a gateway to other illicit drug use in adolescence, our results indicate that the effect may be short-lived, subsiding by age 21. Interestingly, age emerges as a protective status above and beyond the other life statuses and conditions considered here. We find that respondents 'age out' of marijuana's gateway effect regardless of early teen stress exposure or education, work, or family statuses," the researchers say.
The researchers found that the strongest predictor of other illicit drug use appears to be race-ethnicity, not prior use of marijuana. Non-Hispanic whites show the greatest odds of other illicit substance use, followed by Hispanics, and then by African Americans.
Source:
Karen Van Gundy
University of New Hampshire
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (2)
just asking
posted by Sue Kennedy on 7 Sep 2010 at 11:37 amDoes your study consider whether marijuana use contributed to the teens in the study not finishing high school, not going to college or not having a job after high school?
How did the teens in your study rate on current drug usage? Were the ones who did not "move on" to "other" drug use still using marijuana?
In reply to Ms. Sue Kennedy
posted by Phillip George McCracken on 19 Nov 2010 at 2:37 pmI am a current high school student and an ongoing user of marijuana. I am currently an honor roll student and have been excepted into USC, NYU and Fullsail for their film programs. Marijuana use does not prevent you from going places in life. It just appears that way because the majority of marijuana users were never going anywhere to being with.
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