Prospective associations of behavioral economic demand for cannabis and alcohol with simultaneous cannabis and alcohol use among young adults.

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q3 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-20 DOI:10.1037/pha0000725
Sophie G Coelho, Christian S Hendershot, Jeffrey D Wardell
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Abstract

Behavioral economic demand for cannabis and alcohol is robustly associated with cannabis use and alcohol use, respectively. However, few studies have examined the contributions of cannabis and alcohol demand to simultaneous cannabis and alcohol use, which is common among young adults. We examined prospective associations of cannabis demand and alcohol demand with propensity for simultaneous use (broadly defined as using both cannabis and alcohol in the same day) and with cannabis and alcohol consumption during simultaneous use days among young adults. Young adults reporting simultaneous use (N = 107) completed a Marijuana Purchase Task assessing cannabis demand and an Alcohol Purchase Task assessing alcohol demand. They then completed daily smartphone surveys over 21 days assessing cannabis and alcohol use. Multilevel models revealed that higher cannabis demand (i.e., higher Omax, Pmax, and intensity; lower elasticity) was uniquely associated with greater propensity for simultaneous use relative to nonuse. In addition, higher alcohol demand (lower elasticity) was uniquely associated with greater propensity for simultaneous use relative to cannabis-only use, and higher cannabis demand (higher break point and intensity, lower elasticity) was uniquely associated with greater propensity for simultaneous use relative to alcohol-only use. Furthermore, in models limited to simultaneous use days, greater cannabis demand (higher Omax, lower elasticity) and lower alcohol demand (higher elasticity) were uniquely associated with greater overall cannabis flower consumption, and higher alcohol demand (higher Omax, lower elasticity) was uniquely associated with greater overall alcohol consumption. Results suggest that individual differences in cannabis and alcohol demand may contribute to simultaneous cannabis and alcohol use behaviors in a substance-specific pattern. Furthermore, cannabis demand may more strongly drive the tendency to engage in simultaneous use (vs. nonuse) relative to alcohol demand. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

年轻成年人对大麻和酒精的行为经济需求与同时使用大麻和酒精的前瞻性关联。
对大麻和酒精的行为经济需求分别与大麻使用和酒精使用密切相关。然而,很少有研究探讨大麻和酒精需求对同时使用大麻和酒精的影响,而这种情况在青壮年中很常见。我们研究了大麻需求和酒精需求与同时使用倾向(广义上指在同一天内同时使用大麻和酒精)的前瞻性关联,以及与青壮年在同时使用天内的大麻和酒精消费的前瞻性关联。报告同时使用大麻和酒精的年轻人(107 人)完成了评估大麻需求的 "大麻购买任务 "和评估酒精需求的 "酒精购买任务"。然后,他们在 21 天内完成了每日智能手机调查,评估大麻和酒精的使用情况。多层次模型显示,较高的大麻需求(即较高的 Omax、Pmax 和强度;较低的弹性)与较高的同时使用倾向(相对于不使用)有独特的关联。此外,较高的酒精需求量(较低的弹性)与较高的同时使用倾向(相对于只使用大麻)有独特的关联,而较高的大麻需求量(较高的断点和强度,较低的弹性)与较高的同时使用倾向(相对于只使用酒精)有独特的关联。此外,在仅限于同时使用天数的模型中,大麻需求量越大(Omax 越高,弹性越小),酒精需求量越小(弹性越大),与大麻花的总体消费量越大有独特的关联,而酒精需求量越大(Omax 越高,弹性越小),与酒精的总体消费量越大有独特的关联。研究结果表明,大麻和酒精需求的个体差异可能会以特定物质的模式导致同时使用大麻和酒精的行为。此外,相对于酒精需求,大麻需求可能会更强烈地推动同时使用(相对于不使用)的倾向。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA,保留所有权利)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
8.70%
发文量
164
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology publishes advances in translational and interdisciplinary research on psychopharmacology, broadly defined, and/or substance abuse.
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