Changes in undergraduates’ marijuana, heavy alcohol and cigarette use following legalization of recreational marijuana use in Oregon

2017  Journal Article

Changes in undergraduates’ marijuana, heavy alcohol and cigarette use following legalization of recreational marijuana use in Oregon

Pub TLDR

After recreational marijuana legalization in Oregon in 2015, rates of marijuana use among college students increased significantly compared to other states. This increase was only seen in students who reported recent heavy alcohol use, suggesting a potential link between alcohol misuse and marijuana use.

DOI: 10.1111/add.13906    PubMed ID: 28613454
 

College of Health researcher(s)

OSU Profile

Highlights

  • The study examines changes in marijuana use among college students in Oregon following the legalization of recreational marijuana use in 2015.
  • Data was collected from 10,924 undergraduate participants at seven 4-year universities in the United States.
  • Results showed that rates of marijuana use increased from pre- to post-2015 at six of the seven universities, with the largest increase seen among students who reported recent heavy alcohol use.
  • The study suggests that alcohol misuse may be a proxy for vulnerabilities to substance use or lack of cultural prohibitions against it.

Abstract

Background and Aims

Recreational marijuana legalization (RML) went into effect in Oregon in July 2015. RML is expected to influence marijuana use by adolescents and young adults in particular, and by those with a propensity for substance use. We sought to quantify changes in rates of marijuana use among college students in Oregon from pre- to post-RML relative to college students in other states across the same time period.

Design

Repeated cross-sectional survey data from the 2012–16 administrations of the Healthy Minds Study.

Setting

Seven 4-year universities in the United States.

Participants

There were 10 924 undergraduate participants. One large public Oregon university participated in 2014 and 2016 (n = 588 and 1115, respectively); six universities in US states where recreational marijuana use was illegal participated both in 2016 and at least once between 2012 and 2015.

Measurements

Self-reported marijuana use in the past 30 days (yes/no) was regressed on time (pre/post 2015), exposure to RML (i.e. Oregon students in 2016) and covariates using mixed-effects logistic regression. Moderation of RML effects by recent heavy alcohol use was examined.

Findings

Rates of marijuana use increased from pre- to post-2015 at six of the seven universities, a trend that was significant overall. Increases in rates of marijuana use were significantly greater in Oregon than in comparison institutions, but only among students reporting recent heavy alcohol use.

Conclusions

Rates of Oregon college students’ marijuana use increased (relative to that of students in other states) following recreational marijuana legislation in 2015, but only for those who reported recent heavy use of alcohol. Such alcohol misuse may be a proxy for vulnerabilities to substance use or lack of prohibitions (e.g. cultural) against it.

Kerr, D.C., Bae, H., Phibbs, S., Kern, A. (2017) Changes in undergraduates’ marijuana, heavy alcohol and cigarette use following legalization of recreational marijuana use in OregonAddiction112(11)