UF study of drug users finds people with ADHD started using at younger age
“As hypothesized, we found the progression of participants’ adolescent substance use to be similar to that in the gateway theory of substance use, with alcohol being the first reported, followed very closely by cigarettes, then leading to marijuana and eventually more illicit drugs such as cocaine and heroin,” Dunne said.
On average, participants with a history of ADHD said they began using alcohol at age 13 — about 1 ½ years earlier than their counterparts. Those who injected cocaine began doing so, on average, at age 22 — two years earlier than the average age of participants who did not have a history of ADHD.
“Our study also found that current risk behaviors for HIV, such as injection drug use and needle sharing, were associated with ADHD history, so perhaps impulsivity and other ADHD symptoms might continue to be a factor in adult decision-making,” Dunne said.
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