Attention parents: Your teenager brat is not likely to study, get a job or a marriage proposal if he doesn't quit smoking pot

According to study by the University of Connecticut on 1,165 young adults, teenagers who smoke pot and drink alcohol are less likely to be successful in life
Dependent young men achieved less during the study, while dependent women were less lively than non-dependent women | Representative image
Dependent young men achieved less during the study, while dependent women were less lively than non-dependent women | Representative image

Teenagers who use marijuana and alcohol regularly are less likely to achieve life goals as adults, a new study has found. Researchers at the University of Connecticut in the US tracked the effect teenage alcohol and marijuana use on the achievement of life goals, defined as educational achievement, full-time employment, marriage and social economic potential.

The study included 1,165 young adults from across the US whose habits were first assessed at age 12 and then at two-year intervals until they were between 25 and 34 years old. Most of the study participants had an alcoholic relative. "This study found that chronic marijuana use in adolescence was negatively associated with achieving important developmental milestones in young adulthood," said Elizabeth Harari, from the University of Connecticut.

Teen Talk: The teenagers were assessed when they were 12 and then at two-year intervals until they hit 34 years | Representative image

"Awareness of marijuana's potentially deleterious effects will be important moving forward, given the current move in the US toward marijuana legalisation for medicinal and possibly recreational use," said Harari. Overall, individuals who were dependent on either marijuana or alcohol during their teen years achieved lower levels of education were less likely to be employed full time or get married and had lower social economic potential, researchers said.

They also found that dependence may have a more severe effect on young men. Dependent young men achieved less across all four measures, while dependent women were less likely than non-dependent women to obtain a college degree and had lower social economic potential, but were equally likely to get married or obtain full-time employment. 

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