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Journal Article

Citation

StepjanoviĆ D, Hall W, Leung J. Handb. Clin. Neurol. 2023; 197: 121-145.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/B978-0-12-821375-9.00010-4

PMID

37633705

Abstract

This chapter reviews evidence on the relationship between illicit drug use and violence, specifically cannabis, stimulant drugs, and opioids. It summarizes findings of systematic reviews of evidence on cannabis, stimulant drugs, and opioids. It also examines evidence from epidemiological studies of drug use among violent offenders and of violence among persons who use drugs, intervention studies, animal studies, human laboratory studies, and human neuroimaging studies. More studies have examined cannabis because of its higher prevalence of use. There is an association between cannabis use and violence, suggestive evidence of a dose-response relationship between the frequency of cannabis use and violence, and a stronger association in persons with psychoses. There is similar emerging evidence on stimulant use and violence, but evidence on opioids is very limited. There is limited and mixed evidence from intervention studies that reducing drug use reduces violence. Animal and human studies provide potential biological explanations for these associations. The association between cannabis use and violence is most consistent but limited by study heterogeneity and lack of control for potential confounders. It is unclear whether these associations are causal or reflect reverse causation or the effects of confounding.


Language: en

Keywords

Crime; Violence; Alcohol; Aggression; Cannabis; Opioids; Amphetamines; Cocaine; Stimulants

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