University of Maryland School of Public Health, Department of Public and Community Health, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
Addict Behav. 2009 Sep;34(9):764-8. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2009.05.001. Epub 2009 May 18.
Few studies have investigated the association between the social context of cannabis use and cannabis use disorder (CUD). This longitudinal study of college students aimed to: develop a social context measure of cannabis use; examine the degree to which social context is associated with the transition from non-problematic cannabis use to CUD; and, examine the association between social context of cannabis use and depressive symptoms. The analytic sample consisted of 322 past-year cannabis users at baseline. Four distinct and internally consistent social context scales were found (i.e., social facilitation, emotional pain, sex seeking, and peer acceptance). Persistent CUD (meeting DSM-IV criteria for CUD at baseline and 12 months later) was associated with using cannabis in social facilitation or emotional pain contexts, controlling for frequency of cannabis use and alcohol use quantity. Students with higher levels of depressive symptoms were more likely to use cannabis in an emotional pain or sex-seeking context. These findings highlight the importance of examining the social contextual factors relating to substance use among college students.
很少有研究调查大麻使用的社会环境与大麻使用障碍(CUD)之间的关系。本项针对大学生的纵向研究旨在:制定大麻使用的社会环境测量方法;研究社会环境与从不成问题的大麻使用到 CUD 的转变之间的关联程度;以及,研究大麻使用的社会环境与抑郁症状之间的关联。分析样本由基线时的 322 名过去一年使用过大麻的学生组成。发现了四个不同且内部一致的社会环境量表(即社交促进、情感痛苦、性寻求和同伴接受)。持续的 CUD(在基线和 12 个月后符合 DSM-IV 大麻使用障碍标准)与在社交促进或情感痛苦环境中使用大麻有关,这与大麻使用频率和酒精使用量有关。抑郁症状水平较高的学生更有可能在情感痛苦或性寻求的环境中使用大麻。这些发现强调了在大学生中检查与物质使用相关的社会环境因素的重要性。