Literature DB >> 14519174

The cigar as a drug delivery device: youth use of blunts.

Stephen Soldz1, Dana Joy Huyser, Elizabeth Dorsey.   

Abstract

AIMS: Blunts are hollowed-out cigars used to smoke marijuana (and perhaps other substances) in the United States. We investigated rates of blunt use; whether cigar use reported in surveys may actually be blunt use; the relationship of blunt to cigar use; characteristics of blunt users; brands of cigars used to make blunts; and drugs added to blunts.
DESIGN: A school-based survey of youth, the Cigar Use Reasons Evaluation (CURE).
SETTING: Eleven schools across Massachusetts. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 5016 students in grades 7-12. MEASUREMENTS: CURE items assessing blunt, cigar and cigarette use, brands used to make blunts, drugs added to blunts and demographics were used.
FINDINGS: Life-time blunt use was reported by 20.0% of the sample, with use greater among high school (25.6%) than middle school (11.4%) students, and among males (23.7%) than females (16.6%). Self-reported cigar use rates were not influenced strongly by blunt use being misreported as cigar use. In a multivariate model, blunt use was associated with male gender, higher grade in school, lower GPA, truancy, lower school attachment, not living in a two-parent family, being of 'other' race/ethnicity and current use of both cigarettes and cigars. 'Phillies' was the most popular brand of cigar for making blunts, used by 59% of users. 'Garcia y Vega' (18.0%) was the second most popular. Twenty-eight per cent of blunt users had added drugs other than marijuana to blunts.
CONCLUSIONS: The use of blunts as a drug delivery device is a serious problem. Efforts to address it will require the cooperation of the tobacco control and substance abuse prevention systems.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 14519174     DOI: 10.1046/j.1360-0443.2003.00492.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Addiction        ISSN: 0965-2140            Impact factor:   6.526


  51 in total

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5.  The Most Natural Tobacco Used: A Qualitative Investigation of Young Adult Smokers' Risk Perceptions of Flavored Little Cigars and Cigarillos.

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6.  Complexity of measuring "cigar use" in adolescents: results from a split sample experiment.

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7.  Comparison of subjective, pharmacokinetic, and physiological effects of marijuana smoked as joints and blunts.

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8.  Brief Intervention Impact on Truant Youths' Marijuana Use: 18-Month Follow-Up.

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Authors:  Andrew Golub; Bruce D Johnson; Eloise Dunlap
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