Mutual age-varying influences of binge drinking and cannabis use during emerging adulthood in the NCANDA cohort.

IF 2.7 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Jack T Waddell, Ty Brumback, Fiona C Baker, Shayna Cheek, Duncan B Clark, David B Goldston, Jeremy L Grove, Bonnie J Nagel, Kate B Nooner, Adolf Pfefferbaum, Kilian M Pohl, Edith V Sullivan, Susan F Tapert, Wesley K Thompson, Sandra A Brown
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Binge drinking peaks during emerging adulthood and is associated with negative developmental outcomes. Within-person changes in cannabis use have been shown to coincide with binge drinking; however, whether within-person changes in binge drinking and cannabis use prospectively predict one another and whether these relations vary by age remain unknown. The current study sought to fill these gaps.

Methods: Data come from National Consortium on Alcohol and Neurodevelopment (NCANDA) participants aged 18-25 years reporting alcohol and cannabis use (N = 526). Parallel-process state-trait mixed effect growth models tested whether: (1) binge drinking across emerging adulthood was correlated with cannabis use (random intercepts); (2) steeper growth in binge drinking across emerging adulthood correlated with growth in cannabis use (random slopes); and (3) age-specific, within-person changes in binge drinking/cannabis use reciprocally predicted one another.

Results: Across individuals, more frequent binge drinking was correlated with more frequent concurrent cannabis use, and steeper increases in binge drinking were correlated with steeper increases in cannabis use during emerging adulthood. Within-person changes in binge drinking and cannabis use covaried. Within-person increases in cannabis use predicted subsequent increases in binge drinking between ages 18 and 21 years but decreases in binge drinking between ages 24 and 25 years. Within-person changes in binge drinking did not predict subsequent changes in cannabis use during emerging adulthood.

Conclusions: Changes in cannabis use coincided with changes in binge drinking, concurrently and subsequently, particularly between ages 18 and 21 years when changes in cannabis use predicted subsequent increases in binge drinking and ages 24 and 25 years when changes in cannabis use predicted decreases in subsequent binge drinking. Incorporating motivational approaches to reduce cannabis use in alcohol interventions may be efficacious in early emerging adulthood.

在nanda队列中,酗酒和大麻使用在成年初期的相互年龄变化影响。
背景:酗酒在成年初期达到高峰,并与负面的发展结果相关。大麻使用的个人变化已被证明与酗酒相吻合;然而,酗酒和大麻使用的个人内部变化是否可以相互预测,以及这些关系是否因年龄而异,仍然未知。目前的研究试图填补这些空白。方法:数据来自全国酒精和神经发育协会(nanda) 18-25岁报告饮酒和大麻使用的参与者(N = 526)。平行过程状态-特质混合效应增长模型检验了:(1)初成年期酗酒与大麻使用是否相关(随机截取);(2)成年初期酗酒的急剧增长与大麻使用的增长相关(随机斜率);(3)酗酒/大麻使用的年龄特异性、个人内部变化相互预测。结果:在个体中,更频繁的酗酒与更频繁的同时使用大麻相关,并且在成年初期,酗酒的急剧增加与大麻使用的急剧增加相关。个人内部酗酒和大麻使用的变化是共同变化的。个人大麻使用量的增加预示着18至21岁之间酗酒人数的增加,但24至25岁之间酗酒人数的减少。个人内部酗酒的变化并不能预测成年初期大麻使用的后续变化。结论:大麻使用的变化与酗酒的变化同时发生和随后发生的变化相吻合,特别是在18至21岁之间,大麻使用的变化预示着随后酗酒的增加,而在24至25岁之间,大麻使用的变化预示着随后酗酒的减少。在酒精干预措施中纳入减少大麻使用的动机方法,可能对刚进入成年期的人有效。
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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CiteScore
5.40
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