ArticlesPsychological and social sequelae of cannabis and other illicit drug use by young people: a systematic review of longitudinal, general population studies
Introduction
The use of illicit drugs amongst young people seems to be widespread and may be increasing.1 Cannabis is the most widely used illicit substance, although use of psychostimulants also appears quite common; use of opiates seems less common. Most of these drug users do not access drug treatment services and the consequences of their drug use are unclear. Physical health problems aside, there are concerns that illicit drug use, particularly cannabis use, could cause psychological and social problems.2 Cannabis use has been shown to be associated with psychological health problems, use of other illegal drugs, reduced educational attainment, and antisocial behaviour.2 The causal basis of these associations has not been established. If associations are non-causal, harm-reduction policies based on the prevention of drug use are likely to be ineffective. Conversely, a causal association could mean that “recreational” illicit drug use, in view of its apparent extent, represents an important, and substantially hidden, public health problem.
Causal explanations for associations between drug use and psychosocial harm compete with three alternative explanations: reverse causation, where drug use is a consequence, rather than a cause, of psychosocial problems; bias, where the association is an artifact of study methodology; and confounding, when drug use is associated with other factors that predispose to psychosocial problems.
A causal relation between drug use and psychosocial harm could plausibly be mediated by two principal mechanisms: directly, through neurophysiological pathways, or indirectly, through involvement in the criminal culture and commerce associated with use of an illegal substance.3, 4 Past reviews of the relevant evidence have often been non-systematic and have used restricted search strategies. Much evidence is cross-sectional and derives from highly selected samples. Such evidence is limited as a basis for inferring true causal relations and their possible relevance to public health. We therefore undertook a systematic review of general population, longitudinal studies relating illicit drug use by young people to subsequent psychological and social harm.
Section snippets
Search strategy and selection criteria
We searched the general electronic databases MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycLIT, and Web of Science, and the specialist databases of the Lindesmith Center, DrugScope, US National Institute on Drug Abuse and Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, and Addiction Abstracts, with an agreed battery of search terms (available from the authors) in July, 2000. This search was updated in July, 2001, and again in June, 2003. Addiction Abstracts was hand-searched for the period not
Results
We located more than 200 publications deriving from 48 longitudinal studies reporting associations between drug use by young people and psychological or social outcomes. Five studies were not published in English. All studies were observational. All had published results in peer-reviewed journals; however, some additional publications in books and unpublished papers were identified through personal contact. Many studies used composite measures of illicit drug use, making it impossible to infer
Discussion
In this review, we found little evidence from longitudinal studies in the general population about the outcomes of exposure to any illicit drugs other than cannabis. We confirmed the existence of evidence of associations between cannabis use and psychosocial harm; however, the extent and strength of this evidence seemed less than is perhaps sometimes assumed. Furthermore, the causal nature of these associations is far from clear. Some seem to fulfil at least some of the traditional criteria for
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