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Medicinal cannabis use among young adults during California's transition from legalized medical use to adult-use: a longitudinal analysis.

Authors :
Ataiants, Janna
Wong, Carolyn F.
Odejimi, Omolola A.
Fedorova, Ekaterina V.
Conn, Bridgid M.
Lankenau, Stephen E.
Source :
American Journal of Drug & Alcohol Abuse. 2024, Vol. 50 Issue 2, p229-241. 13p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: In 2016, California transitioned from legalized medical cannabis use to adult-use. Little is known about how this policy change affected medicinal cannabis use among young adults. Objectives: To identify longitudinal groups of medicinal cannabis users and concurrent changes in health- and cannabis use-related characteristics among young adults in Los Angeles between 2014 and 2021. Methods: Cannabis users (210 patients and 156 non-patients; 34% female; ages 18–26 at baseline) were surveyed annually across six waves. Longitudinal latent class analysis derived groups from two factors – cannabis patient status and self-reported medicinal use. Trajectories of health symptoms, cannabis use motives, and cannabis use (daily/near daily use, concentrate use, and problematic use) were estimated across groups. Results: Three longitudinal latent classes emerged: Recreational Users (39.3%) – low self-reported medicinal use and low-to-decreasing patient status; Recreational Patients (40.4%) – low self-reported medicinal use and high-to-decreasing patient status; Medicinal Patients (20.3%) – high self-reported medicinal use and high-to-decreasing patient status. At baseline, Medicinal Patients had higher levels of physical health symptoms and motives than recreational groups (p <.05); both patient groups reported higher level of daily/near daily and concentrate use (p <.01). Over time, mental health symptoms increased in recreational groups (p <.05) and problematic cannabis use increased among Recreational Patients (p <.01). Conclusions: During the transition to legalized adult-use, patterns of medicinal cannabis use varied among young adults. Clinicians should monitor increases in mental health symptoms and cannabis-related problems among young adults who report recreational – but not medicinal – cannabis use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00952990
Volume :
50
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Drug & Alcohol Abuse
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176862129
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/00952990.2024.2308098