Pokhrel Pallav, Sussman Steve, Rohrbach Louise Ann, Sun Ping
Department of Preventive Medicine, Institute for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Research, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA.
Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy. 2007 Jul 14;2:22. doi: 10.1186/1747-597X-2-22.
This study examined the one year prospective associations between adolescent social self-control and drug outcomes (cigarette use, alcohol use, marijuana use, hard drug use, and problem drug use) among adolescents from regular and continuation high schools. In our previous cross-sectional study, poor social self-control was found to be associated with higher drug use, controlling for 12 personality disorder categories. In this study, we attempted to find out (a) whether lack of social self-control predicted drug use one year later, and (b) whether drug use at baseline predicted social self-control one year later.
We surveyed 2081 older adolescents from 9 regular (N = 1529) and 9 continuation (alternative) (N = 552) high schools in the Los Angeles area. Data were collected at two time points in an interval of approximately 1 year.
Past 30-day cigarette smoking, marijuana use, hard drug use, and problem drug use at baseline were found to predict lower social self-control at follow-up, controlling for baseline social self-control and demographic variables. The effect of problem drug use as a one-year predictor of social self-control was found to be moderated by school type (regular or continuation high school), such that the relationship was significant for continuation high school students only. Conversely, social self-control was found to predict past 30-day alcohol use, marijuana use, and problem drug use, controlling for baseline drug use and demographic variables. For alcohol use, marijuana use, and problem drug use outcomes, school type was not found to moderate the effects of social self-control, though an interaction effect was found regarding cigarette smoking. Social self-control was a significant predictor of cigarette use only at regular high school.
The results indicate that social self-control and drug use share a reciprocal relationship. Lack of social self-control in adolescents seems to result in increased drug use, which in turn is likely to further decrease social self-control. Thus, it seems that social self-control is an alterable cognitive-behavioral attribute which can be improved through skill-based interventions in order to prevent drug use among adolescents. Policies aimed at preventing drug abuse among adolescents may benefit from institutionalizing social self-control skills training.
本研究调查了普通高中和成人继续教育高中青少年的社交自我控制能力与毒品使用结果(吸烟、饮酒、吸食大麻、使用硬性毒品及毒品使用问题)之间的一年期前瞻性关联。在我们之前的横断面研究中,发现社交自我控制能力差与更高的毒品使用率相关,同时控制了12种人格障碍类别。在本研究中,我们试图弄清楚:(a)缺乏社交自我控制能力是否能预测一年后的毒品使用情况;(b)基线时的毒品使用情况是否能预测一年后的社交自我控制能力。
我们对洛杉矶地区9所普通高中(N = 1529)和9所成人继续教育高中(替代学校)(N = 552)的2081名大龄青少年进行了调查。数据在大约一年的间隔内的两个时间点收集。
在控制了基线社交自我控制能力和人口统计学变量后,发现基线时过去30天内的吸烟、吸食大麻、使用硬性毒品及毒品使用问题能预测随访时较低的社交自我控制能力。发现毒品使用问题作为社交自我控制能力一年期预测指标的效应受到学校类型(普通高中或成人继续教育高中)的调节,即这种关系仅在成人继续教育高中学生中显著。相反,在控制了基线毒品使用情况和人口统计学变量后,发现社交自我控制能力能预测过去30天内的饮酒、吸食大麻及毒品使用问题。对于饮酒、吸食大麻及毒品使用问题的结果,未发现学校类型调节社交自我控制能力的效应,不过在吸烟方面发现了交互效应。社交自我控制能力仅在普通高中是吸烟的显著预测指标。
结果表明社交自我控制能力与毒品使用存在相互关系。青少年缺乏社交自我控制能力似乎会导致毒品使用增加,而这反过来又可能进一步降低社交自我控制能力。因此,社交自我控制能力似乎是一种可改变的认知行为属性,可以通过基于技能的干预措施加以改善,以预防青少年吸毒。旨在预防青少年药物滥用的政策可能会受益于将社交自我控制技能培训制度化。