Objective: The global impact of substance use, including cannabis, amphetamine, cocaine, ecstasy, hallucinogens, and opioids, is increasing, although the overall prevalence is low. Australia and New Zealand are among the few regions of the world in which use (typically illicit) of these classes of substances remains within the top 10 causes of disease burden. The period of adolescence and young adulthood, during which substance use behaviors accelerate in prevalence, is associated with a particular risk for harm. However, the ability to study each substance class has been limited by their low population prevalence in single population-based cohort studies.
Method: The Monitoring Illicit Substance Use (MISUse) Consortium was established to address this problem by bringing together 4 mature prospective cohort studies across Australia and Zealand: Christchurch Health and Development Study (established 1977; 24 waves; N = 1,265), Australian Temperament Project (established 1983; 16 waves; N = 2,443), Victorian Adolescent Health Cohort Study (established 1992; 11 waves; N = 1,943), and International Youth Development Study (established 2002; 10 waves; N = 2,884).
Conclusion: The MISUse Consortium should enable well-powered studies of the natural history, developmental antecedents, and longer-term consequences of illicit substance use with a focus on identifying modifiable determinants of use that can be targeted in population-level policy and intervention responses.
Keywords: cross-cohort; illicit substance use; prospective.
Illicit substance use is a leading risk factor for disease burden in Australasia. However, the low prevalence of use limits research efforts. The MISUse Consortium brings together four mature Australasian cohort studies, from adolescence to adulthood, building a harmonized data resource capable of examining the natural history, developmental origins, and consequences of illicit substance use.
© 2024 The Authors.