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Marijuana and tobacco co-use among a nationally representative sample of US pregnant and non-pregnant women: 2005–2014 National Survey on Drug Use and Health findings

机译:大麻和烟草共同使用美国怀孕和非孕妇的国家代表性:2005-2014国家药物使用和健康调查调查

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Highlights ? Co-use of marijuana and tobacco is more common than marijuana-only use among women. ? Co-use of marijuana and tobacco is less common than tobacco-only use among women. ? Pregnant women who co-use differ from non-pregnant women who co-use. ? Co-use during pregnancy is associated with disparities in age, race, and ethnicity. ? Co-use during pregnancy is associated with alcohol and other illicit drug use. Abstract Background Marijuana and tobacco are the most commonly used illicit and licit drugs during pregnancy. This study aimed to examine a nationally representative sample of US pregnant women and to: (1) determine the prevalence of past month marijuana and tobacco co-use, (2) identify characteristics that distinguish marijuana and tobacco co-users from users of marijuana only, tobacco only, or neither, and (3) compare characteristics that differ between pregnant and non-pregnant co-users of marijuana and tobacco. Methods Data were obtained from 497,218 US women (8721 pregnant) ages 12–49 who participated in the 2005–2014 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. Prevalence and demographic and substance use characteristics were compared across groups using weighted estimates and chi-squared tests. Multinomial logistic regression identified demographic and substance use correlates of co-use. Results Co-use among pregnant and non-pregnant women was significantly more prevalent than marijuana-only use but was less common than tobacco-only use. In unadjusted frequencies, pregnant co-users significantly differed from non-pregnant co-users across several domains. Among pregnant women, multivariate correlates of co-use of tobacco and marijuana vs. tobacco-only use were ages 12–17, non-Hispanic black race, Hispanic ethnicity, and past month polytobacco, any alcohol, and other drug use (all adjusted odds ratios ≥ 2.0). Conclusions In this first examination of the prevalence and correlates of co-use of marijuana and tobacco among a nationally representative group of pregnant women, pregnant co-users were more likely to report other high risk behaviors compared with non-pregnant co-users and users of a single substance, suggesting disparities worthy of further investigation.
机译:强调 ?同时使用大麻和烟草比妇女中的大麻使用更常见。还同时的大麻和烟草不如烟草在女性中使用的常见。还共同使用的孕妇与共同使用的非孕妇不同。还怀孕期间共同用与年龄,种族和种族的差异有关。还怀孕期间共同用与酒精和其他非法药物使用有关。摘要背景大麻和烟草是怀孕期间最常用的非法和合法的药物。本研究旨在审查美国孕妇的国家代表性和:(1)确定过去一个月大麻和烟草共同使用的普及,(2)识别仅区分大麻和烟草共处的特征,仅烟草,或者既不是(3)比较孕妇和烟草非怀孕共处之间不同的特征。方法从497,218名美国女性(8721年怀孕)年龄在12-49岁的美国妇女中获得数据,他们参与了2005 - 2014年的药物使用和健康调查。使用加权估计和Chi平方测试的组比较流行和人口统计和物质使用特征。多项式物流回归被确定的人口统计学和物质使用共同用途。结果怀孕和非孕妇共同使用比仅纯粹的孕妇更普遍,但唯一的含量不如烟草使用。在不调整的频率中,怀孕的共同体用户在多个域中的非怀孕共同体用户显着不同。在孕妇中,多变量相关的烟草和大麻与烟草使用年龄12-17岁,非西班牙裔人,西班牙裔民族,以及过去一个月的多月份,任何酒精和其他药物使用(全部调整差距≥2.0)。结论在这首次审查了孕妇的国家代表性妇女的普及和烟草共同使用的患病率和相关性,与非怀孕的共同用户和用户相比,怀孕的共同体更有可能报告其他高风险行为一个物质,表明差异值得进一步调查。

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