Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Addiction. 2010 Mar;105(3):515-23. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2009.02801.x. Epub 2009 Dec 18.
Cannabis use is referenced frequently in American popular music, yet it remains uncertain whether exposure to these references is associated with actual cannabis use. We aimed to determine if exposure to cannabis in popular music is associated independently with current cannabis use in a cohort of urban adolescents.
We surveyed all 9th grade students at three large US urban high schools. We estimated participants' exposure to lyrics referent to cannabis with overall music exposure and content analyses of their favorite artists' songs. Outcomes included current (past 30 days) and ever use of cannabis. We used multivariable regression to assess independent associations between exposures and outcomes while controlling for important covariates.
Each of the 959 participants was exposed to an estimated 27 cannabis references per day [correction added on 19 January 2010, after first online publication: 40 has been changed to 27] (standard deviation = 73 [correction added on 19 January 2010, after first online publication: 104 has been changed to 73]). Twelve per cent (n = 108) were current cannabis users and 32% (n = 286) had ever used cannabis. Compared with those in the lowest tertile of total cannabis exposure in music, those in the highest tertile of exposure were almost twice as likely to have used cannabis in the past 30 days (odds ratio = 1.83; 95% confidence interval = 1.04, 3.22), even after adjusting for socio-demographic variables, personality characteristics and parenting style. As expected, however, there was no significant relationship between our cannabis exposure variable and a sham outcome variable of alcohol use.
This study supports an independent association between exposure to cannabis in popular music and early cannabis use among urban American adolescents.
大麻的使用在美国流行音乐中经常被提及,但目前仍不确定接触这些信息是否与实际的大麻使用有关。我们旨在确定在一个城市青少年队列中,流行音乐中对大麻的描述与当前大麻使用是否独立相关。
我们调查了美国三所大型城市高中的所有 9 年级学生。我们通过对参与者接触大麻的整体音乐暴露程度和他们最喜欢的艺术家歌曲的内容分析,来评估他们接触大麻的歌词。结果包括当前(过去 30 天)和以往使用大麻的情况。我们使用多变量回归来评估暴露和结果之间的独立关联,同时控制重要的协变量。
959 名参与者中的每个人每天估计会接触到 27 个大麻参考信息(标准差 = 73)。12%(n = 108)是当前的大麻使用者,32%(n = 286)曾使用过大麻。与音乐中大麻总暴露量最低三分位数的参与者相比,暴露量最高三分位数的参与者在过去 30 天内使用大麻的可能性几乎是前者的两倍(比值比 = 1.83;95%置信区间 = 1.04,3.22),即使在调整了社会人口统计学变量、个性特征和养育方式之后也是如此。然而,正如预期的那样,我们的大麻暴露变量与虚假的酒精使用结果变量之间没有显著关系。
这项研究支持了在流行音乐中接触大麻与美国城市青少年早期大麻使用之间的独立关联。