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Home » UConn Study: Teenage Pot, Alcohol Use Can Reduce Success Later In Life

UConn Study: Teenage Pot, Alcohol Use Can Reduce Success Later In Life

Teens who use a lot of marijuana and alcohol are less likely to have a full-time job when they grow up, or to get a college education or get married, according to a new study by University of Connecticut researchers.

The study of 1,165 young adults from across the U.S. also found that dependence on pot and booze may also have a “more severe effect on young men” than on young women.

This study found that chronic marijuana use in adolescence was negatively associated with achieving important developmental milestones in young adulthood.

— Elizabeth Harari, University of Connecticut researcher

Young women who were dependent on marijuana and alcohol were also less likely to go to college and had a lower standard of living than nondependent women, but were equally likely to be employed full time and to get married as nondependent women.

“This study found that chronic marijuana use in adolescence was negatively associated with achieving important developmental milestones in young adulthood,” Elizabeth Harari, a UConn Health psychiatry resident and author of the study, told UConn Today.

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