Three-year assessment of the counselling cannabis clinics for young users (2005-2007)

Cannabis is the most widely used illegal substance in France, particularly in young people, despite a fall in use since 2002 after ten years of continuous increase.

In 2007, 5% of 16-year-old males and 2% of 16-year-old females reported that they used cannabis regularly. 

Three years after the introduction of the "clinics for young users" and following an initial survey, this work reviews the change in the outpatients' profiles based on the responses of professionals who managed the outpatients in 226 of the 274 clinics for young users identified in 2007 (or 82%).

The analyses are based on a sample of 3 788 people, of whom 2 938 were substance users (77.6% of the public in a given month), 79% of whom attended alone, and 850 people from the person's family or close friends (22.4%). 

These allow the new trends and features of the public seen to be identified by recruitment sector.

The results presented include previously unpublished findings about the nature of the requests, the reasons for use, criteria used to assess dependency, responses offered to the different user profiles and the change in their use trajectory during the sessions.

Publication type
Tendances
No.
63
Publication date
Language
French
English
Author(s)
OBRADOVIC
Ivana
Edited by
OFDT
Number of pages
4
Products & addictions
Alcohol
Cannabis
Cocaine and crack
Heroin and opioids
LSD and mushrooms
MDMA/ecstasy and amphetamine
Tobacco
Themes
Treatment
Specific population(s)
Adolescents
Adults
Women/Men
Territories
France
Dispositif d'enquête et d'observation
Epidemiological surveys