大学生酒精和大麻共同使用的瞬间模式:评估与焦虑的时间关联。

Cannabis (Albuquerque, N.M.) Pub Date : 2022-02-02 Epub Date: 2021-12-17 DOI:10.26828/cannabis/2022.01.005
Kristina T Phillips, Mark A Prince, Michael M Phillips, Trent L Lalonde, Michael D Stein
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引用次数: 1

摘要

使用生态瞬时评估(EMA),我们评估了大学生酒精和大麻共同使用的瞬时模式,以及国家水平和基线焦虑报告是否根据所消耗物质的类型而变化。报告经常使用大麻的学生(N=109)完成了基线评估和两周的信号随机EMA,每天随机提示三次。在每个EMA实例中,我们将物质“使用”实例分类为:1)不使用,2)仅使用大麻,3)仅使用酒精,或4)酒精和大麻共同使用(即在同一提示内报告酒精和大麻使用)。利用时间序列数据,采用多层结构方程模型(mmsm)探讨了使用类型前后状态焦虑的变化,以及基线因素(一般焦虑、社交焦虑和性别)是否影响使用类型与状态焦虑之间的关系。参与者中白人占63.3%,女性占58.7%,几乎每天都使用大麻,并且通常报告共同使用。检查使用类型是否预测随后的状态水平焦虑的模型主要是显著的,大多数关系对于基线较高的一般焦虑的参与者更为明显。在研究瞬时状态焦虑是否预测使用类型时,在参与者报告较高水平的瞬时焦虑的情况下,与共同使用和仅使用大麻相比,他们更有可能报告不使用大麻,而性调节了其中的一些关系。社交焦虑对状态焦虑和使用类型之间的人际关系没有调节作用。本研究提供了初步证据,表明瞬间焦虑的报告存在物质类型差异。未来的研究需要确定共用相关的协同效应和相关因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Momentary patterns of alcohol and cannabis co-use in college students: Assessing the temporal association with anxiety.

Momentary patterns of alcohol and cannabis co-use in college students: Assessing the temporal association with anxiety.

Using ecological momentary assessment (EMA), we assessed momentary patterns of alcohol and cannabis co-use in college students and whether state-level and baseline reports of anxiety varied based on type of substance(s) consumed. Students (N=109) reporting regular cannabis use completed a baseline assessment and two-week signal-contingent EMA, with three random prompts/day. At each EMA instance, we categorized instances of substance "usage" as: 1) no use, 2) cannabis-only, 3) alcohol-only, or 4) co-use of alcohol and cannabis (i.e., reports of alcohol and cannabis use within the same prompt). Using temporal sequenced data, we explored how state-level anxiety varied before and after usage type using multiple multilevel structural equation models (MSEMs) and whether baseline factors (general anxiety, social anxiety, and sex) influenced the relation between usage type and state-level anxiety. Participants were 63.3% White, 58.7% female, used cannabis near-daily, and commonly reported co-use. Models examining whether usage type predicted subsequent state-level anxiety were predominantly significant, with the majority of relationships being more pronounced for participants with higher baseline general anxiety. In examining whether momentary state-level anxiety predicted usage type, in instances when participants reported higher levels of momentary anxiety, they were more likely to report no use compared to co-use and cannabis-only, with sex moderating some of the relationships. Social anxiety did not moderate any of the within-person associations between state-level anxiety and usage type. This study provides preliminary evidence that report of momentary anxiety varies based on substance type. Future research is needed to establish co-use related synergistic effects and correlates.

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