Source: IACM
15 February 2009
Cannabis use appears to have decreased among most European and North American adolescents from 2002 to 2006, researchers in Switzerland said. Emmanuel Kuntsche of the Swiss Institute for the Prevention of Alcohol and Drug Problems in Lausanne, Switzerland, and colleagues analysed data from 93,297 15-year-old students who participated in the Health Behavior in School-Aged Children study.
Study participants from 31 countries – mostly in Europe and North America – were surveyed in 2002 and again in 2006 about cannabis use and the number of evenings per week they usually spend out with their friends, among other topics. The study found cannabis use decreased in most countries, with the most significant declines in England, Portugal, Switzerland, Slovenia and Canada. Increases were observed in Estonia, Lithuania, and Malta and among girls in Russia. “The more frequently adolescents reported going out with their friends in the evenings, the more likely they were to report using cannabis, or marijuana,” the study authors said in a statement.
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