Greek
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Substance Use and Misuse 2018-Dec

Patterns and Correlates of Tobacco and Cannabis co-use by Tobacco Product Type: Findings from the Virginia Youth Survey.

Μόνο εγγεγραμμένοι χρήστες μπορούν να μεταφράσουν άρθρα
Σύνδεση εγγραφή
Ο σύνδεσμος αποθηκεύεται στο πρόχειρο
Caroline O Cobb
Eric K Soule
Alyssa K Rudy
Megan E Sutter
Amy M Cohn

Λέξεις-κλειδιά

Αφηρημένη

BACKGROUND

Cannabis use is more common among tobacco users than nonusers, and co-use (i.e., use of both substances individually) may be increasing. Better understanding of patterns and correlates of co-use is needed. The current study aimed to compare rates and correlates of tobacco and cannabis co-use by tobacco product among youth.

METHODS

High school students who completed the 2013 Virginia Youth Survey and reported past 30-day tobacco use (cigarette, smokeless tobacco, cigar) were included (n = 1390). Prevalence of past 30-day tobacco-only and cannabis co-use was calculated. Demographic, tobacco, and other substance use characteristics were compared by co-use status. Multivariate logistic regression models examined correlates of co-use overall and by tobacco product.

RESULTS

Over half of tobacco users were co-users. Poly-tobacco use, particularly combusted tobacco, was more prevalent among co-users. Past 30-day alcohol use and lifetime other illegal drug use/prescription drug misuse were common correlates of co-use. Black Non-Hispanic (NH) race/ethnicity was associated with co-use when restricted to cigarette users. "Other" race/ethnicity was associated with co-use in the overall model and when restricted to cigar users. Past 30-day cigarette smoking was associated with co-use in all models except among cigar smoking co-users. Conclusions/Importance: Rates and correlates of tobacco and cannabis co-use were not uniform and differed by tobacco product type. Tobacco and cannabis co-users may be at greater risk for negative health effects associated with inhaled tobacco and other risky substance use. The efficacy of prevention efforts may be improved if risk factors associated with product-specific co-use are considered.

Γίνετε μέλος της σελίδας
μας στο facebook

Η πληρέστερη βάση δεδομένων φαρμακευτικών βοτάνων που υποστηρίζεται από την επιστήμη

  • Λειτουργεί σε 55 γλώσσες
  • Βοτανικές θεραπείες που υποστηρίζονται από την επιστήμη
  • Αναγνώριση βοτάνων με εικόνα
  • Διαδραστικός χάρτης GPS - ετικέτα βότανα στην τοποθεσία (σύντομα)
  • Διαβάστε επιστημονικές δημοσιεύσεις που σχετίζονται με την αναζήτησή σας
  • Αναζήτηση φαρμακευτικών βοτάνων με τα αποτελέσματά τους
  • Οργανώστε τα ενδιαφέροντά σας και μείνετε ενημερωμένοι με την έρευνα ειδήσεων, τις κλινικές δοκιμές και τα διπλώματα ευρεσιτεχνίας

Πληκτρολογήστε ένα σύμπτωμα ή μια ασθένεια και διαβάστε για βότανα που μπορεί να βοηθήσουν, πληκτρολογήστε ένα βότανο και δείτε ασθένειες και συμπτώματα κατά των οποίων χρησιμοποιείται.
* Όλες οι πληροφορίες βασίζονται σε δημοσιευμένη επιστημονική έρευνα

Google Play badgeApp Store badge