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Paediatrics and Child Health 2018-May

Prevalence of alcohol, tobacco, cannabis and other illicit substance use in a population of Canadian adolescents with type 1 diabetes compared to a general adolescent population.

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Kathryn Potter
Paola Luca
Danièle Pacaud
Heidi Virtanen
Alberto Nettel-Aguirre
Laura Kaminsky
Josephine Ho

Keywords

Abstract

UNASSIGNED

Youth with chronic conditions may engage in risky behaviour to the same, if not higher, degree as their healthy peers.

UNASSIGNED

To determine the prevalence of alcohol, tobacco, cannabis and illicit substance use in adolescents with type 1 diabetes (T1DM) compared to a general adolescent population.

UNASSIGNED

Cross-sectional survey of adolescents with T1DM (13 to 18 years). A published contemporary Canadian youth survey on use of alcohol, tobacco and illicit drugs was used as data representative of the general adolescent population. Outcome measures between the T1DM and general group were compared using Chi-square and Fisher's exact test where appropriate.

UNASSIGNED

One hundred and sixty-four adolescents with T1DM (mean 15.6 years [SD 1.5]; 51.3% male) were participated. The proportions of adolescents with T1DM who have tried substances were: alcohol 51.8%, tobacco 27.4%, cannabis 22.6% and other illicit substances 7.3%. Compared to the general population (n=3469), there were no significant differences in the proportion of adolescents that reported ever consuming alcohol, tobacco or cannabis. Reported illicit substance use was significantly lower in adolescents with T1DM compared to general population (7.3% versus 36.0%, P<0.0001).

UNASSIGNED

Proportions reporting having ever consumed alcohol, tobacco or cannabis were not significantly different between the two groups. However, the proportion of adolescents with T1DM who reported ever consuming an illicit substance was different from the comparison group. It is important to explore risky behaviours with adolescents with T1DM and focus on prevention and education during routine clinic visits.

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