Examining the Relation Between Social Anxiety and Cannabis Problems Among College Students Through Coping-Related Expectancies and Motives

Katherine Berry, Nicholas Livingston, EmmaJo Briles, Alison Looby
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Abstract

Objective: College students high in social anxiety are at increased risk for cannabis-related problems. This may be particularly true when they hold strong coping-related expectancies and motives for cannabis. However, few studies have examined these constructs together in accordance with the motivational model, which posits that substance use is proximally influenced by motives and more distally influenced by expectancies. Thus, the current study examined whether the relation between social anxiety and cannabis-related problems was indirectly explained through coping-related expectancies, motives, and cannabis use. Method: Past-month cannabis users (N = 660; 71.6% female, 47.3% white non-Hispanic) from seven U.S. universities completed an online survey assessing social anxiety, and cannabis use frequency, problems, expectancies, and motives. A saturated path model examined social anxiety as a predictor of cannabis problems via coping-related expectancies and motives, and cannabis frequency. Results: There was a positive indirect effect of social anxiety on cannabis problems through cognitive and behavioral impairment expectancies, depression coping motives, and cannabis use. Social anxiety also indirectly positively related to cannabis problems via social and sexual facilitation expectancies, social anxiety coping motives, and cannabis use. Further, social anxiety indirectly positively related to cannabis problems through relaxation and tension reduction expectancies, both depression and social anxiety coping motives, and cannabis use. These indirect effects were invariant by sex assigned at birth. Conclusions: Results support using a theory-informed model of coping-related cannabis cognitions to understand the relation between social anxiety and cannabis problems. Interventions that modify coping-related cognitions may reduce cannabis-related problems in college students high in social anxiety.
通过与应对相关的期望和动机来研究大学生社交焦虑与大麻问题之间的关系
目的:社交焦虑高的大学生出现大麻相关问题的风险会增加。当他们对大麻抱有强烈的应对期望和动机时,情况可能尤其如此。然而,很少有研究根据动机模型将这些因素结合在一起进行研究,该模型认为药物使用在近端受动机影响,在远端受期望影响。因此,本研究探讨了社交焦虑与大麻相关问题之间的关系是否可以通过与应对相关的预期、动机和大麻使用情况来间接解释。研究方法来自美国七所大学的上月大麻使用者(N = 660;71.6% 为女性,47.3% 为非西班牙裔白人)完成了一项在线调查,对社交焦虑、大麻使用频率、问题、预期和动机进行了评估。一个饱和路径模型通过与应对相关的预期和动机以及吸食大麻的频率,对社交焦虑作为大麻问题的预测因素进行了研究。结果显示社交焦虑通过认知和行为障碍预期、抑郁应对动机和大麻使用对大麻问题有正向间接影响。社交焦虑还通过社交和性促进预期、社交焦虑应对动机和大麻使用间接与大麻问题产生正相关。此外,社交焦虑通过放松和减少紧张预期、抑郁和社交焦虑应对动机以及使用大麻间接与大麻问题呈正相关。这些间接影响与出生时的性别无关。结论:研究结果支持使用与大麻应对相关的认知理论模型来理解社交焦虑与大麻问题之间的关系。改变应对相关认知的干预措施可能会减少社交焦虑高的大学生的大麻相关问题。
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