Publication |
Sentence |
Publish Date |
Extraction Date |
Species |
Scott T Leatherdale, David G Hammond, Murray Kaiserman, Rashid Ahme. Marijuana and tobacco use among young adults in Canada: are they smoking what we think they are smoking? Cancer causes & control : CCC. vol 18. issue 4. 2007-06-07. PMID:17235494. |
the authors characterized marijuana smoking among young adult canadians, examined the co-morbidity of tobacco and marijuana use, and identified correlates associated with different marijuana use consumption patterns. |
2007-06-07 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
Scott T Leatherdale, David G Hammond, Murray Kaiserman, Rashid Ahme. Marijuana and tobacco use among young adults in Canada: are they smoking what we think they are smoking? Cancer causes & control : CCC. vol 18. issue 4. 2007-06-07. PMID:17235494. |
males and those who first tried marijuana at an earlier age also reported more frequent marijuana use. |
2007-06-07 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
Rosemeri Siqueira Pedroso, Margareth da Silva Oliveira, João Feliz Duarte Morae. [Translation, adaptation, and validation of the Brazilian version of the Marijuana Expectancy Questionnaire]. Cadernos de saude publica. vol 23. issue 1. 2007-06-04. PMID:17187105. |
this study presents the translation and validation of the marijuana expectancy questionnaire (meq-brazilian adaptation), which evaluates the expectancy of results in marijuana use, important for treatment and prognosis related to addiction to this substance. |
2007-06-04 |
2023-08-12 |
human |
Jeffrey S Simons, Kate B Care. An affective and cognitive model of marijuana and alcohol problems. Addictive behaviors. vol 31. issue 9. 2007-05-17. PMID:16426771. |
among marijuana users, there was an indirect positive association between use utility and time 1 (t1) marijuana-related problems through t1 marijuana use, whereas there was a direct positive association between affect lability and t1 marijuana-related problems. |
2007-05-17 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
Christopher L Aberson, Joseph Beene. Does substance use affect reliabilities of the Implicit Association Test? The Journal of social psychology. vol 147. issue 1. 2007-05-14. PMID:17345920. |
consistent with research indicating the possibility that marijuana use depletes cognitive resources, the authors found worse reliabilities for participants who recently used marijuana than for those who had not. |
2007-05-14 |
2023-08-12 |
human |
Marc L Copersino, Susan J Boyd, Donald P Tashkin, Marilyn A Huestis, Stephen J Heishman, John C Dermand, Michael S Simmons, David A Gorelic. Quitting among non-treatment-seeking marijuana users: reasons and changes in other substance use. The American journal on addictions. vol 15. issue 4. 2007-05-02. PMID:16867925. |
this study examines the self-reported reasons for quitting marijuana use, changes in other substance use during the quit attempt, and reasons for the resumption of use in 104 non-treatment-seeking adult marijuana smokers. |
2007-05-02 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
Valerie S Harder, Andrew R Morral, Jeremy Arke. Marijuana use and depression among adults: Testing for causal associations. Addiction (Abingdon, England). vol 101. issue 10. 2007-02-13. PMID:16968348. |
to determine whether marijuana use predicts later development of depression after accounting for differences between users and non-users of marijuana. |
2007-02-13 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
Kerry M Green, Margaret E Ensminge. Adult social behavioral effects of heavy adolescent marijuana use among African Americans. Developmental psychology. vol 42. issue 6. 2007-01-23. PMID:17087550. |
logistic regression results on the sample matched on sex, and early demographic and behavioral variables showed that adolescent marijuana use has adult social behavioral consequences: use of marijuana 20 times or more during adolescence was associated with being unemployed and unmarried in young adulthood and having children outside of marriage for both males and females. |
2007-01-23 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
Nancy L Day, Lidush Goldschmidt, Carrie A Thoma. Prenatal marijuana exposure contributes to the prediction of marijuana use at age 14. Addiction (Abingdon, England). vol 101. issue 9. 2007-01-18. PMID:16911731. |
prenatal marijuana exposure contributes to the prediction of marijuana use at age 14. |
2007-01-18 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
Nancy L Day, Lidush Goldschmidt, Carrie A Thoma. Prenatal marijuana exposure contributes to the prediction of marijuana use at age 14. Addiction (Abingdon, England). vol 101. issue 9. 2007-01-18. PMID:16911731. |
to evaluate the effects of prenatal marijuana exposure (pme) on the age of onset and frequency of marijuana use while controlling for identified confounds of early marijuana use among 14-year-olds. |
2007-01-18 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
James D Slavet, L A R Stein, Suzanne M Colby, Nancy P Barnett, Peter M Monti, Charles Golembeske, Rebecca Lebeau-Crave. The Marijuana Ladder: measuring motivation to change marijuana use in incarcerated adolescents. Drug and alcohol dependence. vol 83. issue 1. 2007-01-12. PMID:16289930. |
the marijuana ladder: measuring motivation to change marijuana use in incarcerated adolescents. |
2007-01-12 |
2023-08-12 |
human |
James D Slavet, L A R Stein, Suzanne M Colby, Nancy P Barnett, Peter M Monti, Charles Golembeske, Rebecca Lebeau-Crave. The Marijuana Ladder: measuring motivation to change marijuana use in incarcerated adolescents. Drug and alcohol dependence. vol 83. issue 1. 2007-01-12. PMID:16289930. |
the purpose of this study was to determine if a modified version of the contemplation ladder, a measure of motivation to change marijuana use among incarcerated adolescents (marijuana ladder; ml), was related to marijuana use and treatment engagement. |
2007-01-12 |
2023-08-12 |
human |
Nicolas Rodondi, Mark James Pletcher, Kiang Liu, Stephen Benjamin Hulley, Stephen Sidne. Marijuana use, diet, body mass index, and cardiovascular risk factors (from the CARDIA study). The American journal of cardiology. vol 98. issue 4. 2006-09-21. PMID:16893701. |
more extensive marijuana use was associated with a higher caloric intake (2,746 kcal/day in never users to 3,365 kcal/day in those who used marijuana for > or = 1,800 days over 15 years) and alcohol intake (3.6 to 10.8 drinks/week), systolic blood pressure (112.7 to 116.5 mm hg), and triglyceride levels (84 to 100 mg/dl or 0.95 to 1.13 mmol/l, all p values for trend < 0.001), but not with higher bmi and lipid and glucose levels. |
2006-09-21 |
2023-08-12 |
human |
Nicolas Rodondi, Mark James Pletcher, Kiang Liu, Stephen Benjamin Hulley, Stephen Sidne. Marijuana use, diet, body mass index, and cardiovascular risk factors (from the CARDIA study). The American journal of cardiology. vol 98. issue 4. 2006-09-21. PMID:16893701. |
in multivariate analysis, the associations between marijuana use and systolic blood pressure and triglycerides disappeared, having been mainly confounded by greater alcohol use in marijuana users. |
2006-09-21 |
2023-08-12 |
human |
Jeffrey M Lessem, Christian J Hopfer, Brett C Haberstick, David Timberlake, Marissa A Ehringer, Andrew Smolen, John K Hewit. Relationship between adolescent marijuana use and young adult illicit drug use. Behavior genetics. vol 36. issue 4. 2006-09-15. PMID:16565887. |
marijuana use was defined as any use during adolescence, and drug use was defined as self-reported past year use of other illicit drugs besides marijuana. |
2006-09-15 |
2023-08-12 |
human |
George S Yacoubian, Eric D Wis. A comparison between instant and laboratory oral fluid analysis among arrestees. Journal of psychoactive drugs. vol 38. issue 2. 2006-09-11. PMID:16903460. |
moreover, while the marijuana sensitivity and specificity coefficients in the current study were high, a growing body of research has indicated that of analysis is not as accurate as the gold standard of urinalysis in detecting recent marijuana use. |
2006-09-11 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
Denise D Walker, Roger A Roffman, Robert S Stephens, Kim Wakana, James Berghuis, Wakana Ki. Motivational enhancement therapy for adolescent marijuana users: a preliminary randomized controlled trial. Journal of consulting and clinical psychology. vol 74. issue 3. 2006-09-08. PMID:16822119. |
this study's aims were (a) to investigate the feasibility of a school-based motivational enhancement therapy (met) intervention in voluntarily attracting adolescents who smoke marijuana regularly but who are not seeking formal treatment and (b) to evaluate the efficacy of the intervention in reducing marijuana use. |
2006-09-08 |
2023-08-12 |
human |
Denise D Walker, Roger A Roffman, Robert S Stephens, Kim Wakana, James Berghuis, Wakana Ki. Motivational enhancement therapy for adolescent marijuana users: a preliminary randomized controlled trial. Journal of consulting and clinical psychology. vol 74. issue 3. 2006-09-08. PMID:16822119. |
despite the absence of a clear effect of met, this study demonstrated that adolescents could be attracted to participate in a voluntary marijuana intervention that holds promise for reducing problematic levels of marijuana use. |
2006-09-08 |
2023-08-12 |
human |
Andrew Golub, Bruce D Johnson, Eloise Dunla. The growth in marijuana use among American youths during the 1990s and the extent of blunt smoking. Journal of ethnicity in substance abuse. vol 4. issue 3-4. 2006-08-18. PMID:16537326. |
many blunt smokers reported they had not used marijuana, which suggests that they did not define smoking blunts as marijuana use. |
2006-08-18 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
Rashi K Shukl. Using marijuana in adulthood: the experience of a sample of users in Oklahoma City. Journal of ethnicity in substance abuse. vol 4. issue 3-4. 2006-08-18. PMID:16537332. |
adult users limit their consumption of marijuana to free time, and keep their marijuana use from interfering with other responsibilities. |
2006-08-18 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |