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. 2016 Dec 1:169:26-32.
doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2016.10.004. Epub 2016 Oct 11.

State-level medical marijuana laws, marijuana use and perceived availability of marijuana among the general U.S. population

Affiliations

State-level medical marijuana laws, marijuana use and perceived availability of marijuana among the general U.S. population

Silvia S Martins et al. Drug Alcohol Depend. .

Abstract

Background: Little is known on how perceived availability of marijuana is associated with medical marijuana laws. We examined the relationship between medical marijuana laws (MML) and the prevalence of past-month marijuana use, with perceived availability of marijuana.

Methods: Data were from respondents included in the National Survey of Drug Use and Health restricted use data portal 2004-2013. Multilevel logistic regression of individual-level data was used to test differences between MML and non-MML states and changes in prevalence of past-month marijuana use and perceived availability from before to after passage of MML among adolescents, young adults and older adults controlling for demographics.

Results: Among adults 26+, past-month prevalence of marijuana use increased from 5.87% to 7.15% after MML passage (Adjusted Odds Ratio (AOR): 1.24 [1.16-1.31]), but no change in prevalence of use was found for 12-17 or 18-25 year-olds. Perceived availability of marijuana increased after MML was enacted among those 26+ but not in younger groups. Among all age groups, prevalence of marijuana use and perception of it being easily available was higher in states that would eventually pass MML by 2013 compared to those that had not. Perceived availability was significantly associated with increased risk of past-month marijuana use in all age groups.

Conclusion: Evidence suggests perceived availability as a driver of change in use of marijuana due to MML. To date, this has only occurred in adults 26+ and different scenarios that could explain this change need to be further explored.

Keywords: Availability; Cannabis; Marijuana use; Medical marijuana laws.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
A) Prevalence of marijuana use in the past month by age group and state MML status (Passed MML before or during 2004, Passed MML between 2005–2013, and States without MML by 2013). a B) Prevalence of availability of marijuana (fairly or very easy to obtain marijuana) by age group and state MML status. a. Number of states by MML status: 11 states enacting MML before or during 2004 (CA, OR, WA, AK, ME, CO, NV, HI, MD, MT, VT); 10 states enacting MML between 2005–2013 (RI, NM, MI, AZ, NJ, DE, CT, MA, IL, NH); and 29 states without MML by 2013. Abbreviations: MML= Medical marijuana laws

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