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Controlled Use of Cannabis Among Young Adults in Los Angeles Across Changes in Cannabis Policies
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Controlled Use of Cannabis Among Young Adults in Los Angeles Across Changes in Cannabis Policies

Stephen E. Lankenau, Janna Ataiants, Mark Prince, Ekaterina Fedorova, Bridgid M. Conn, Emily Ansell and Carolyn F. Wong
International journal of mental health and addiction, Forthcoming
20 Dec 2025
Featured in Collection :   Research Supported by Drexel Libraries' OA Programs
url
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11469-025-01608-wView
Published, Version of Record (VoR)Open Access via Drexel Libraries Read and Publish Program 2025CC BY V4.0 Open

Abstract

Life Sciences & Biomedicine Psychology, Clinical Science & Technology Psychiatry Psychology Social Sciences Substance Abuse
The availability of cannabis has increased due to expanding legalization of cannabis across the USA. Controlled use of cannabis - rules by cannabis users that limit use - is a significant but understudied area in the present policy environment, particularly among young adults. A prospective Los Angeles-based cohort aged 18-26 who used cannabis in the past 90 days was assessed during eight survey waves across 9 years. Four discrete waves were analyzed: wave 1 (2014-2015/medical only policy, n = 366), wave 4 (2017-2018/transition to adult use policy, n = 275), wave 5 (2019-2020/adult use policy, n = 241), and wave 8 (2022-2023/adult use policy, n = 193). Five rules of controlled cannabis use were used as indicators in a latent class analysis. Two discrete latent classes - Controlled and Uncontrolled - emerged and became more distinct over time. The Uncontrolled class was a majority across all waves. Probabilities for two rules of controlled use - "no school/work" or "no driving" under the influence - increased overtime, and one rule - "stopping cannabis use" - decreased during the transition to legalized adult use. The Controlled class, which consistently practiced more rules, used less cannabis across all waves and had lower problematic cannabis use in waves 1, 4, and 5 compared to the Uncontrolled class.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Web of Science research areas
Psychiatry
Psychology, Clinical
Substance Abuse
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