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Association of maternal smoking and alcohol consumption with young adults' cannabis use: a prospective study

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journal contribution
posted on 2007-09-01, 00:00 authored by M R Hayatbakhsh, R Alati, Delyse HutchinsonDelyse Hutchinson, K Jamrozik, J M Najman, A A Mamun, M O'callaghan, W Bor
This 2006 study examined 1) whether maternal use of tobacco and consumption of alcohol when a child is 5 and 14 years of age predict cannabis use in young adults, and 2) whether this association is explained by possible confounding or mediating factors. Data were taken from a prospective birth cohort study of mothers and their children in Brisbane, Australia. This study was based on a cohort of 3,176 young adults who participated at the 21-year follow-up of the study and for whom data were available on maternal smoking and alcohol consumption 5 and 14 years after their birth. After controlling for possible confounders, the authors found that maternal smoking at 14 years was associated with frequent use of cannabis in offspring at 21 years, regardless of maternal smoking at 5 years. Children of mothers who drank more than one glass of alcohol at 5 years and continued at 14 years were more likely to use cannabis in early adulthood. The association between maternal substance use and offspring cannabis use was partially mediated by adolescent externalizing behavior and smoking measured at 14 years. Prevention programs that address maternal and adolescent tobacco use and adolescent externalizing behavior should be considered as strategies to reduce cannabis use by young adults.

History

Journal

American journal of epidemiology

Volume

166

Issue

5

Pagination

592 - 598

Publisher

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Location

Baltimore, Md.

ISSN

0002-9262

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2007, The Author