Trajectories of Marijuana use during the Transition to Adulthood: The Big Picture Based on National Panel Data

Author:

Schulenberg John E.1,Merline Alicia C.2,Johnston Lloyd D.3,O'Malley Patrick M.4,Bachman Jerald G.5,Laetz Virginia B.6

Affiliation:

1. research professor and associate director in the Survey Research Center, professor in the Department of Psychology, and research professor at the Center for Human Growth and Development, all at the University of Michigan

2. Research fellow at the University of Michigan Alcohol Research Center

3. Research professor at the University of Michigan's Survey Research Center, is principal investigator of the Monitoring the Future and the Youth, Education and Society studies

4. Research professor at the University of Michigan's Survey Research Center, is program director on the Monitoring the Future and the Youth, Education and Society studies

5. Research professor at the University of Michigan's Survey Research Center, is program director of the Monitoring the Future and the Youth, Education and Society studies

6. Research associate at the Survey Research Center, is a data analyst for the Youth and Social Issues research projects

Abstract

The purposes of this study were to identify trajectory groups of frequent marijuana use during emerging adulthood; distinguish among trajectory groups according to demographic and lifestyle characteristics; and examine how the trajectory groups relate to behavioral, attitudinal, and social-emotional correlates over time. National panel data from the Monitoring the Future study were used: 18 cohorts of high school seniors (classes of 1977–1994) were followed biennially through age 24. Frequent marijuana use was defined as 3+ occasions of use in past month and/or 20 to 40+ occasions in past year. Based on four waves of complete longitudinal data (N=19,952), six frequent marijuana use trajectory groups were identified: chronic, decreased, increased, fling, rare, and abstain. Categorical analyses revealed trajectory group differences in demographic and lifestyle characteristics at senior year and age 24. The trajectory groups varied significantly in longitudinal patterns of other substance use, problem behaviors, and well-being.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health(social science),Medicine (miscellaneous)

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