investigators also found higher substance use disorders among adolescents versus young adults at all time frames with regard to non-medical use of prescription drugs.
indeed, for opioids, the development of a related use disorder within 12 months — at 11.2 per cent for adolescents and 6.9 per cent for young adults — was somewhat in line with the percentages for weed, study figures show.
that said, the largest divide within 12 months of first prescription drug misuse was for stimulant use disorder. in all, 13.9 per cent of adolescents had the related disorder compared to 3.9 per cent of young adults.
overall,
according to addiction professional, those who first used weed during adolescence had “double the prevalence of a substance use disorder than users of nicotine, alcohol and, in most user categories, prescription drug misusers.”
adolescents’ higher prevalence of substance use disorders within 12 months of initiation for both cannabis and prescription misuse suggests “a link between faster transition to substance use disorders and a young age of initiation,”addiction professional notes.
the findings “emphasize the vulnerability of young people to developing substance use disorders,” notes the nih statement. the agency further reports that the data excluded incarcerated individuals or homeless people not living in shelters, “possibly underestimating the prevalence of substance use disorders across the findings.”