Alcohol abstinence has been a growing trend among college-aged adults over the last two decades. It's an encouraging shift that aligns with a decline in alcohol use disorder.
However, those gains have been partly tempered by another trend: More young adults are using marijuana and misusing alcohol and marijuana together.
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Those are the findings of a study conducted by researchers at the University of Michigan and Texas State University. They showcase a mixed bag of substance use trends among U.S. adults ages 18 to 22.
The percentage of college students who abstained from alcohol increased from 20% in 2002 to 28% in 2018, the study found. It similarly jumped from 24% to 30% for young adults who were not in college.
At the same time, alcohol addiction rates plummeted.
"The prevalence of alcohol use disorder in both groups in 2018 was roughly half of what it was in 2002," said Sean Esteban McCabe, director of the Center for the Study of Drugs, Alcohol, Smoking and Health at the University of Michigan.
"We are excited to learn about these drops in disordered drinking, as alcohol-related consequences are one of the leading causes of mortality and morbidity for young adults."
Still, marijuana use increased, rising from about 33% to 37% in both groups, though the prevalence of marijuana use disorder remained stable. And researchers found the spike in co-use of alcohol and marijuana concerning.
The percentage of college students co-using marijuana and alcohol jumped from 20% in 2002 to 26% in 2018. Among non-college students, it increased from 21% to 25%.
"Polysubstance use can have more negative consequences and can be more difficult to treat," said co-author Ty Schepis, a psychology professor at Texas State.
Prescription drug use and illicit drug use also was common among adults who misused alcohol and marijuana, according to study data.
More than 75% of those with both alcohol use disorder and marijuana use disorder reported past-year prescription drug use and illicit drug use. And 62.2% reported prescription drug misuse.
Schepis added that from 2015 to 2018, only 2.5% of young adults who abstained from alcohol and marijuana reported misusing prescription drugs, compared to 25.1% of co-users who misused prescription drugs.
"That is a tenfold difference with potentially dangerous consequences," he said.
This highlights a changing "substance use landscape" where misusing several different substances is more common, researchers said. That requires different intervention strategies be adopted.
Schools and employers need to focus on screening and interventions for polysubstance use and abuse, McCabe said, noting more than 1 million young adults are in recovery.
"Interventions that focus solely on one substance will be less effective than interventions that take a more holistic polysubstance use perspective," McCabe said. "The findings of our study reinforce the complex task health professionals have of detecting and developing effective interventions to reduce consequences associated with polysubstance use, such as co-use of alcohol and marijuana."
The study, published Monday in JAMA Pediatrics, included data from a nationally representative survey of 182,722 young adults.