Indicated prevention for college student marijuana use: a randomized controlled trial

Christine M Lee, Jason R Kilmer, Clayton Neighbors, David C Atkins, Cheng Zheng, Denise D Walker, Mary E Larimer, Christine M Lee, Jason R Kilmer, Clayton Neighbors, David C Atkins, Cheng Zheng, Denise D Walker, Mary E Larimer

Abstract

Objective: Marijuana is the most frequently reported illicit substance used on college campuses. Despite the prevalence, few published intervention studies have focused specifically on addressing high-risk marijuana use on college campuses. The present study evaluated the efficacy of an in-person brief motivational enhancement intervention for reducing marijuana use and related consequences among frequently using college students.

Method: Participants included 212 college students from 2 campuses who reported frequent marijuana use (i.e., using marijuana at least 5 times in the past month). Participants completed Web-based screening and baseline assessments and upon completion of the baseline survey were randomized to either an in-person brief intervention or an assessment control group. Follow-up assessments were completed approximately 3 and 6 months post-baseline. Marijuana use was measured by number of days used in the past 30 days, typical number of joints used in a typical week in the last 60 days, and marijuana-related consequences.

Results: Results indicated significant intervention effects on number of joints smoked in a typical week and a trend toward fewer marijuana-related consequences compared with the control group at 3-month follow-up.

Conclusion: This study provides preliminary data on short-term effects of a focused marijuana intervention for college students at reducing marijuana use during the academic quarter.

PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved.

Figures

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Figure 1
Participant Flow

Source: PubMed

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