In essence, cannabis PBS are behaviours used before, during, after, and/or instead of cannabis use to reduce consumption, intoxication and related harms, explains the study published online in pre-proof on Apr. 28.
Cannabis PBS has “been identified to play an important role for harm reduction in adolescent and young adult users,” according to a Swiss study published last month.
Investigators in the current study conducted an examination of cannabis PBS use among college students. Better understanding cannabis PBS across cultures will allow the approach to be leveraged “to address the global health burden of cannabis use, especially in light of the changes in cannabis-related policies around the world.”
Specifically, the U.S. and Spain samples reported the most frequent use of cannabis PBS and the Netherlands sample reported the least. Across all countries except the Netherlands, “females reported more frequent cannabis PBS use than males,” the study notes.
Researchers point out that although not statistically significant, they found cannabis PBS use was positively correlated with weed-related outcomes — such as frequency, quantity and negative consequences of cannabis use — in the Argentina and Netherlands samples. But even though females reported more frequent cannabis PBS, “the associations of PBS with cannabis-related outcomes were larger for males than females,” study authors write.
“Given preliminary evidence for cultural differences in cannabis PBS use,” more research is needed to understand underlying the cultural factors supporting these differences, they note. A better understanding will help “inform the delivery of interventions aimed at reducing the harms of cannabis among college students.”
A study published five years ago exploring cannabis PBS among young adults — undergraduate college students who reported past six month weed use — found the mean composite score was “negatively associated with marijuana use and consequences, with the strongest correlations evident for past-month users.”