Buu Anne, Dabrowska Agata, Heinze Justin E, Hsieh Hsing-Fang, Zimmerman Marc A
School of Nursing, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Addiction Research Center, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Addict Behav. 2015 Nov;50:6-12. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2015.06.015. Epub 2015 Jun 11.
Heavy drinking is highly comorbid with nicotine and marijuana use among young adults. Yet, our knowledge about the longitudinal effects of nicotine and marijuana use (including onset timing and quantity/frequency) on heavy drinking and whether the effects vary by gender is very limited. This study aims to characterize gender-specific developmental trajectories of multiple substance use and to examine gender differences in the effects of nicotine and marijuana use on heavy drinking.
We conducted secondary analysis on 8 waves of data from 850 high-risk youth who were recruited as ninth graders with low GPA in an economically disadvantaged school district in the Midwest and were followed up annually to young adulthood. Onset ages and quantity/frequency of multiple substance use were assessed by a self-report questionnaire at each wave. The time-varying effect model and linear mixed model were adopted for statistical analysis.
Males' levels of heavy drinking, nicotine use, and marijuana use tended to grow persistently from adolescence to emerging adulthood. Females, on the other hand, only gradually increased their nicotine use across time while maintaining low levels of heavy drinking and marijuana use. Controlling for the early onset status of alcohol use, early onset statuses of nicotine use and marijuana use both added additional risk for heavy drinking; late onset marijuana users were also at higher risk for heavy drinking than nonusers of marijuana. Controlling for substance use onset statuses, higher quantity/frequency of nicotine and marijuana use both contributed to more involvement in heavy drinking. We also found that the effect of nicotine use quantity on heavy drinking was greater among males.
Our study demonstrates the longitudinal effects of onset timing and quantity/frequency of nicotine and marijuana use on heavy drinking. Our analysis of gender differences also identifies female youth's nicotine use and male youth's co-use of nicotine and alcohol as two important areas for future prevention and intervention work.
在年轻成年人中,酗酒与尼古丁和大麻使用高度共病。然而,我们对于尼古丁和大麻使用(包括开始时间及数量/频率)对酗酒的纵向影响以及这些影响是否因性别而异的了解非常有限。本研究旨在描述多种物质使用的性别特异性发展轨迹,并研究尼古丁和大麻使用对酗酒影响的性别差异。
我们对来自850名高危青少年的8波数据进行了二次分析,这些青少年在中西部一个经济弱势学区以九年级学生身份被招募,其平均绩点较低,并每年随访至成年早期。每次随访时通过自我报告问卷评估多种物质使用的开始年龄及数量/频率。采用时变效应模型和线性混合模型进行统计分析。
从青春期到成年早期,男性的酗酒、尼古丁使用和大麻使用水平往往持续上升。另一方面,女性仅随着时间逐渐增加其尼古丁使用,同时保持较低的酗酒和大麻使用水平。在控制饮酒的早期开始状态后,尼古丁使用和大麻使用的早期开始状态均增加了酗酒的额外风险;大麻使用开始较晚的使用者酗酒风险也高于未使用大麻者。在控制物质使用开始状态后,较高的尼古丁和大麻使用数量/频率均导致更多地参与酗酒。我们还发现,尼古丁使用量对酗酒的影响在男性中更大。
我们的研究证明了尼古丁和大麻使用的开始时间及数量/频率对酗酒的纵向影响。我们对性别差异的分析还确定了女性青少年的尼古丁使用以及男性青少年尼古丁与酒精的共同使用是未来预防和干预工作的两个重要领域。