Skip to Content
  • Reply
  • Open Access

17 September 2015

Response to Martinez-Novack et al. Comments on Hynes et al. Prevalence of Marijuana Use among University Students in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health, 2015, 12, 5233-5240

,
,
and
1
Inter-American Observatory on Drugs, Inter-American Drug Abuse Control Commission (CICAD), Organization of American States (OAS), 1889 F Street NW, Washington, DC 20006, USA
2
Global SMART Programme (Latin America), United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 1889 F Street NW, Washington, DC 20006, USA
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
We have read with great interest the Comments related to the article entitled “Prevalence of marijuana use among university 20 students in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru” and appreciate the readers’ feedback [1].
For our study “Prevalence of marijuana use among university students in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru” [2], a sample size was calculated to meet certain conditions of accuracy and reliability. We doubled this sample size to reach 50 percent response rates from the original sample. Based on our calculations, our target response rate was 50 percent.
Response rates in our study are shown in Table 1. Response rates were 43.26 percent of the original sample in 2009 and 31.94 percent in 2012. Response rates in the survey did not reach the target of 50 percent, which is indeed a limitation of the study. The overall response rates were 86.52 percent of the expected sample in 2009 and 63.88 percent in 2012.
We present the weighted estimates, which were included in the original article, in Table 2. In addition, we created Table 3 with unweighted estimates of the prevalence of marijuana use in Andean countries. While readers might find unweighted estimates informational, estimates for the weighted sample are more precise because weighting the data tends to inflate sample size [3].
We would like to thank the readers for their comments as this will help us to improve our future analyses.
Table 1. Response rates from original and expected samples in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru, 2009 and 2012.
Table 1. Response rates from original and expected samples in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru, 2009 and 2012.
Response Rates (Original Sample)Response Rates (Expected Sample)
2009201220092012
Bolivia27.83%20.05%55.66%40.10%
Colombia67.75%54.30%135.51%108.60%
Ecuador31.18%24.16%62.37%48.32%
Peru46.28%29.24%92.56%58.47%
TOTAL43.26%31.94%86.52%63.88%
Table 2. Prevalence of marijuana use in Andean countries (weighted) (Differences in prevalence between 2009 and 2012 were statistically significant (p < 0.01) for all countries, in the overall population and among males. Differences in prevalence for females were only significant in Colombia and Ecuador).
Table 2. Prevalence of marijuana use in Andean countries (weighted) (Differences in prevalence between 2009 and 2012 were statistically significant (p < 0.01) for all countries, in the overall population and among males. Differences in prevalence for females were only significant in Colombia and Ecuador).
BoliviaColombiaEcuadorPeru
20092012200920122009201220092012
LifetimeMales11.0919.6532.8339.0317.2532.3710.5116.88
Females3.766.4419.2724.356.1813.105.616.57
Total7.4911.9726.4131.1611.4121.948.4011.58
Past yearMales2.665.0614.5519.866.8812.643.366.02
Females1.402.278.1510.812.245.932.462.65
Total2.043.4411.5115.014.439.002.974.29
Past monthMales0.942.456.7610.262.105.521.082.66
Females0.560.733.614.441.302.100.910.63
Total0.761.455.277.141.683.671.001.62
Table 3. Prevalence of marijuana use in Andean countries (unweighted) (Differences in prevalence between 2009 and 2012 were statistically significant (p < 0.01) for all countries, in the overall population and among males. Differences in prevalence for females were only significant in Colombia and Ecuador.)
Table 3. Prevalence of marijuana use in Andean countries (unweighted) (Differences in prevalence between 2009 and 2012 were statistically significant (p < 0.01) for all countries, in the overall population and among males. Differences in prevalence for females were only significant in Colombia and Ecuador.)
BoliviaColombiaEcuadorPeru
20092012200920122009201220092012
LifetimeMales18.8718.6523.4135.8223.4140.5113.8016.75
Females8.717.1413.4722.237.1318.587.527.61
Total13.0412.0918.0828.6315.0529.1910.5912.14
Past yearMales6.065.9610.5818.387.7619.055.026.61
Females3.472.775.909.822.969.323.303.09
Total4.694.148.0713.805.3014.034.144.83
Past monthMales2.342.594.819.513.329.111.732.69
Females1.141.002.343.971.143.201.280.89
Total1.711.683.496.552.206.061.501.78

References

  1. Martinez-Novack, M.C.; Ortiz-Ortiz, M.T.; Castañeda-Carbajal, B.; Alvarado, G.F. Comments on Hynes et al. Prevalence of Marijuana Use among University Students in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2015, 12. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Hynes, M.; Demarco, M.; Araneda, J.; Cumsille, F. Prevalence of Marijuana use among university students in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2015, 12, 5233–5240. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  3. Szklo, M.; Nieto, F.J. Epidemiology: Beyond the Basics; Gaithersburg, M.D., Ed.; Aspen Publishers Inc.: New York, NY, USA, 2000. [Google Scholar]

Article Metrics

Citations

Article Access Statistics

Multiple requests from the same IP address are counted as one view.