社交媒体和在线获取毒品:一项在美国和西班牙青少年和年轻人中的全国性研究

Atte Oksanen, B. Miller, I. Savolainen, Anu Sirola, J. Demant, Markus Kaakinen, Izabela Zych
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引用次数: 41

摘要

毒品在暗网服务和社交媒体上都有销售,但调查这些在线购买毒品的研究仍在兴起。本研究的目的是分析与网上购买药物相关的风险因素。利用犯罪学和成瘾研究的理论,研究人员假设社会联系、自制力低下和心理健康状况不佳与网上购买毒品有关。此外,预测网上购买毒品会中介低自我控制与经常吸毒之间的关系。这项全国性研究的参与者是生活在美国(N = 1212)和西班牙(N = 1212)的15至25岁的人。冲动、掌控感、社会归属感、心理困扰、过度行为(饮酒、赌博和上网)等指标被用来预测在线购买毒品的行为。2%的美国和西班牙受访者表示在网上购买毒品,其中77%的人利用社交媒体服务购买毒品。多项logistic回归、惩罚最大似然logistic回归和二元中介回归结果表明,网络毒品购买与自我控制能力下降、心理困扰程度升高、过度赌博行为和过度网络使用有关。拥有在线朋友并不是一个风险因素,但与线下朋友的紧密社交关系却起到了保护作用。此外,网上购买毒品在自我控制低下与经常使用毒品之间起中介作用。结果表明,由于网络吸毒者存在多重自我控制和心理健康问题,应更多关注主流社交媒体服务作为药物获取来源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social Media and Access to Drugs Online: A Nationwide Study in the United States and Spain among Adolescents and Young Adults
Drugs are sold on both dark web services and on social media, but research investigating these drug purchases online is still emerging. The aim of this study is to analyze risk factors associated with buying drugs online. Utilizing theories of criminology and addiction research, it was hypothesized that social bonds, low levels of self-control, and poor mental health are associated with buying drugs online. Additionally, it was predicted that purchases of drugs online would mediate the relationship between low self-control and regular drug use. Participants of this nationwide study were 15 to 25 years old living in the United States (N = 1,212) and Spain (N = 1,212). Measures of impulsivity, a sense of mastery, social belonging, psychological distress, excessive behaviors (drinking, gambling and internet use) were utilized to predict purchasing drugs online. Two percent of the U.S. and Spanish respondents reported buying drugs online with 77p of them utilizing social media services to buy drugs. Results from multinomial logistic regression, penalized maximum-likelihood logistic regression, and binary mediation regression models indicated that buying drugs online was associated with lower self-control, higher psychological distress, and excessive gambling behavior and excessive Internet use. Having online friends was not a risk factor, but having strong social bonds with offline friends served as a protective factor. Additionally, buying drugs online mediated the relationship between low self-control and regular use of drugs. Results indicate that more focus should be placed on mainstream social media services as sources of drug acquisition as online drug buyers have multiple self-control and mental health problems.
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