Alcohol and tobacco use increases the exposure to marijuana and starting to use marijuana. Alcohol and tobacco use with the use of marijuana increases exposure to try cocaine. Marijuana use increases the probability of starting to use cocaine. This type of epidemiologic data suggests that alcohol and tobacco use leads to marijuana use, which leads to the use of cocaine.
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Alcohol and Tobacco Use and Marijuana Use Are “Stepping Stones” to Cocaine Use
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CURRENT LESSON OBJECTIVES
- How prevalent is alchhol use in adolescense
- How prevalent are alcohol use disorders in collece and what increases it.
- How does age of onset of drinking relate to age of first dependence on alcohol
- Does advertising increase youth drinking?
- Can alcohol use lead to marijuana use and to cocaine us?
- Exposure to which regular drinking family member increases adolescent drinking the most?
- Does early life adversity and illness increase alcohol problems?
- How do acute alcohol effects differ between adolescent and adult rats
- Does alcohol in adolescense cause changes in motor and cognitive function in adulthood?
- Do alcohol effects on memory seen in adolescent rats persist up to age 25 in humans?
- How could neurobiologic effects of alcohol in adolescense explain alcohol-age effects?
- Describe the effects of alcohol on brain structure
- Summary
RELATED RESOURCES
Related Clinical Cases
- Adolescent Drinking (Sneaky Teen is Not Squeeky Clean)
- Alcohol Withdrawal focuses on
- Binge Drinking in College (Rebel Without a Cause)
- Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) focuses on
Related Quizzes
- Alcohol and accidents focuses on
- Alcohol and adolescence focuses on
- Alcohol Genetics focuses on
- Alcohol withdrawal focuses on
- Diagnosis and treatment focuses on
- Epidemiology
- Fetal alcohol syndrome focuses on
- Medical complications
- Neurobiology focuses on
- Pharmacology and acute effects alcohol
- Regular drinking focuses on