Dayton Daily News

Study: Teenage alcohol, pot use can cut success

Education, jobs, marriage all suffer, researcher­s find.

- By Gregory B. Hladky

HARTFORD, CONN. — Teens who use a lot of marijuana and alcohol are less likely to have a full-time job when they grow up, or to get a college education or get married, according to a new study by University of Connecticu­t researcher­s.

The study of 1,165 young adults from across the U.S. also found that dependence on pot and booze may also have a “more severe effect on young men” than on young women.

Young women who were dependent on marijuana and alcohol were also less likely to go to college and had a lower standard of living than non-dependent women, but were equally likely to be employed full time and to get married as non-dependent women.

“This study found that chronic marijuana use in adolescenc­e was negatively associated with achieving important developmen­tal milestones in young adulthood,” Elizabeth Harari, a UConn Health psychiatry resident and author of the study, told UConn Today.

Harari presented the results of the research at the American Public Health Associatio­n’s 2017 Annual Meeting and Expo in Atlanta.

The research tracked informatio­n collected by the Collaborat­ive Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism on young people beginning at age 12. These individual­s were then re-assessed at twoyear intervals until they were between 25 and 34 years old, checking on their educationa­l levels, marital status, full-time employment and social and economic potential.

Earlier academic research has demonstrat­ed that chronic use of alcohol or marijuana in adolescenc­e can affect the user’s developmen­t. The new UConn study differed in that it attempted to determine what heavy use of pot and booze would mean for a person in adulthood.

“Awareness of marijuana’s potentiall­y deleteriou­s effects will be important moving forward, given the current move in the U.S. toward marijuana legalizati­on for medicinal and possibly recreation­al use,” Harari said.

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