临床医生对娱乐性大麻合法化后青少年大麻相关信仰和行为的看法

IF 3.7 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Kelly C. Young-Wolff , Monique B. Does , Maha N. Mian , Stacy A. Sterling , Derek D. Satre , Cynthia I. Campbell , Lynn D. Silver , Stacey E. Alexeeff , Sarah F. Cunningham , Asma Asyyed , Andrea Altschuler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景随着越来越多的州将大麻合法化,有必要开展研究,从护理青少年的临床医生的角度了解娱乐性大麻合法化(RCL)对青少年的潜在影响。方法本定性研究从临床医生的角度探讨大麻合法化是否与青少年使用大麻的信念、行为和后果的变化有关。在 2022 年 6 月 9 日至 12 月 21 日期间,对一家大型医疗机构的 32 名临床医生进行了半结构化定性访谈。结果 32 名参与者(56.3% 为女性,平均 [SD] 年龄为 45.9 [7.6] 岁;65.3% 为非西班牙裔白人)分别来自成瘾医学科(n = 13)、精神病学/心理健康科(n = 7)、儿科(n = 5)和急诊科(n = 7)。据临床医生描述,RCL 后青少年使用大麻、使用不可燃模式和高效力产品的情况有所增加,首次使用大麻的年龄也有所降低。临床医生报告了社会、物质和政策方面的变化,包括社会规范、吸引人的广告、营销和更容易获得等方面的变化。许多人指出,RCL 后,青少年感知到的危害减少了,自我药疗增加了。他们描述了 RCL 如何促使父母更多使用大麻以及对青少年使用大麻的放任。结论来自不同专业的临床医生描述了 RCL 后青少年大麻使用和大麻相关后果的增加,以及社会规范、获取途径、营销和广告方面的变化,以及危害感知的减少。研究结果可以为在大麻合法化后大麻供应量和可接受性增加的背景下支持青少年的策略提供信息,并支持为更大规模的定量工作提出假设。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Clinician perspectives on adolescent cannabis-related beliefs and behaviors following recreational cannabis legalization

Background

As more states legalize cannabis, studies are needed to understand the potential impacts of recreational cannabis legalization (RCL) on adolescents from the perspective of clinicians who care for them.

Methods

This qualitative study characterized clinician perspectives on whether cannabis legalization is associated with changes in adolescents’ cannabis use beliefs, behaviors, and consequences. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 32 clinicians in a large healthcare organization from 9/6/2022–12/21/2022. Video-recorded interviews were transcribed and analyzed using thematic analysis.

Results

The 32 participants (56.3 % female, mean [SD] age, 45.9 [7.6] years; 65.3 % non-Hispanic White) were from Addiction Medicine (n = 13), Psychiatry/Mental Health (n = 7), Pediatrics (n = 5), and the Emergency Department (n = 7). Clinicians described post-RCL increases in adolescent cannabis use, use of non-combustible modes and high-potency products, and younger age of first use. Clinicians reported social, physical, and policy changes, including changes in social norms, appealing advertisements, marketing, and easier access. Many noted fewer perceived harms among adolescents and greater self-medication post-RCL. They described how RCL contributed to increased parental cannabis use and permissiveness around adolescent use. Finally, many described post-RCL increases in cannabis hyperemesis syndrome, and several noted increased cannabis-related psychosis and acute intoxication, and decreased court-mandated treatment.

Conclusions

Clinicians from diverse specialties described post-RCL increases in adolescent cannabis use and cannabis-related consequences, alongside changes in social norms, access, marketing and advertisements, and decreased perceptions of harms. Findings can inform strategies to support adolescents in the context of increased cannabis availability and acceptability post-legalization and support the development of hypotheses for broader-scale quantitative work.

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来源期刊
Addictive behaviors
Addictive behaviors 医学-药物滥用
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
4.50%
发文量
283
审稿时长
46 days
期刊介绍: Addictive Behaviors is an international peer-reviewed journal publishing high quality human research on addictive behaviors and disorders since 1975. The journal accepts submissions of full-length papers and short communications on substance-related addictions such as the abuse of alcohol, drugs and nicotine, and behavioral addictions involving gambling and technology. We primarily publish behavioral and psychosocial research but our articles span the fields of psychology, sociology, psychiatry, epidemiology, social policy, medicine, pharmacology and neuroscience. While theoretical orientations are diverse, the emphasis of the journal is primarily empirical. That is, sound experimental design combined with valid, reliable assessment and evaluation procedures are a requisite for acceptance. However, innovative and empirically oriented case studies that might encourage new lines of inquiry are accepted as well. Studies that clearly contribute to current knowledge of etiology, prevention, social policy or treatment are given priority. Scholarly commentaries on topical issues, systematic reviews, and mini reviews are encouraged. We especially welcome multimedia papers that incorporate video or audio components to better display methodology or findings. Studies can also be submitted to Addictive Behaviors? companion title, the open access journal Addictive Behaviors Reports, which has a particular interest in ''non-traditional'', innovative and empirically-oriented research such as negative/null data papers, replication studies, case reports on novel treatments, and cross-cultural research.
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