Savage Jeanne E, Kaprio Jaakko, Korhonen Tellervo, Pulkkinen Lea, Rose Richard J, Verhulst Brad, Dick Danielle M
Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University.
Institute for Molecular Medicine FIMM, University of Helsinki.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2016 Jun;30(4):462-74. doi: 10.1037/adb0000183.
Conflicting reports exist on the direction of the relationship between social anxiety (SA) and alcohol/cigarette use (AU/CU) and alcohol/nicotine dependence (AD/ND), with both positive and negative associations reported. A prospective, longitudinal sample of Finnish twins (n = 1,906) was used to test potential explanations for these discrepancies. Specifically, this study used peer, parent, and teacher ratings of SA, and a clinical interview screening item for social anxiety disorder (SAD-Sc) to examine associations between SA and AU/CU and AD/ND from early adolescence into young adulthood. Peer-rated SA was negatively associated with AU, CU, and AD from age 14 through age 22, implying a protective effect (β = -0.01 to -.03). Teacher- and parent-rated SA associations were in the same directions but weaker or nonsignificant, indicating that aspects of SA that are recognizable by peers may be most relevant to AU/CU. Self-reported SAD-Sc was also negatively associated with AU, but positively associated with AD symptoms in young adulthood (β = 0.38). Our findings partially support the existence of different associations between SA and AU versus AD, but only in the context of SAD-Sc rather than trait SA. Neither trait SA nor SAD-Sc significantly predicted ND symptoms, although SAD-Sc was associated with both cigarette abstinence and daily smoking. These findings suggest that adolescent SA is modestly associated with lower AU/CU, although there may be some individuals with more severe SA who develop alcohol problems later in life. There was little evidence of a common underlying liability contributing to both SA and alcohol/cigarette use. (PsycINFO Database Record
关于社交焦虑(SA)与酒精/香烟使用(AU/CU)以及酒精/尼古丁依赖(AD/ND)之间关系的方向,存在相互矛盾的报告,既有正向关联也有负向关联的报道。本研究采用了一个芬兰双胞胎的前瞻性纵向样本(n = 1906)来检验这些差异的潜在解释。具体而言,本研究使用了同伴、父母和教师对社交焦虑的评分,以及一个社交焦虑障碍临床访谈筛查项目(SAD-Sc),来考察从青春期早期到成年早期社交焦虑与AU/CU以及AD/ND之间的关联。从14岁到22岁,同伴评定的社交焦虑与AU、CU和AD呈负相关,这意味着有保护作用(β = -0.01至-0.03)。教师和父母评定的社交焦虑关联方向相同,但较弱或不显著,这表明同伴能够识别的社交焦虑方面可能与AU/CU最为相关。自我报告的SAD-Sc也与AU呈负相关,但在成年早期与AD症状呈正相关(β = 0.38)。我们的研究结果部分支持了社交焦虑与AU和AD之间存在不同关联的观点,但仅在SAD-Sc的背景下而非特质社交焦虑的背景下。特质社交焦虑和SAD-Sc均未显著预测ND症状,尽管SAD-Sc与戒烟和每日吸烟均有关联。这些发现表明,青少年社交焦虑与较低的AU/CU适度相关,尽管可能有一些社交焦虑更严重的个体在以后的生活中会出现酒精问题。几乎没有证据表明存在共同的潜在因素导致社交焦虑和酒精/香烟使用。(PsycINFO数据库记录)