Ecker Anthony H, Dean Kimberlye E, Buckner Julia D, Foster Dawn W
a South Central Mental Illness Research and Clinical Center , Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center , Houston , Texas.
b Baylor College of Medicine , Houston , Texas.
J Ethn Subst Abuse. 2019 Apr-Jun;18(2):211-223. doi: 10.1080/15332640.2017.1333477. Epub 2017 Jul 5.
Cannabis use among college students is associated with negative consequences, including those that can negatively affect academic functioning. Perceived descriptive and injunctive norms are among the strongest predictors of college cannabis use and related problems, and perceived norms differentially relate to cannabis outcomes depending on the reference group (e.g., close friends, family members). However, no known studies have examined the effect of race on these relationships. Yet, given that African American students are more strongly affected by parental influence than Caucasian students and that they endorse more social motives for cannabis use, African American students may be affected by perceived norms regarding parents and friends differentially from Caucasian students. The current study tested the moderational role of race on the relationship between perceived norms and cannabis use and related problems. Cannabis-using undergraduates (N = 103; 78.6% female) completed an online survey. Race moderated the relationship between injunctive norms regarding parents and cannabis-related problem severity such that among African American students (but not Caucasian students), endorsement of more permissive perceived parental injunctive norms was related to greater cannabis-related problem severity (but not cannabis use frequency). Interactions were not significant between race and descriptive norms or between race and peer injunctive norms. African American students who perceive that their parents are more accepting of cannabis use may be especially at risk for cannabis-related problems. Results underscore the importance of considering cultural factors in identification of vulnerability factors related to cannabis problems.
大学生使用大麻会带来负面后果,包括那些会对学业表现产生负面影响的后果。感知到的描述性规范和禁令性规范是大学生使用大麻及相关问题的最强预测因素之一,并且根据参照群体(例如亲密朋友、家庭成员)的不同,感知到的规范与大麻使用结果之间的关系也有所差异。然而,尚无已知研究考察种族对这些关系的影响。不过,鉴于非裔美国学生比白人学生更容易受到父母影响,并且他们认可更多使用大麻的社会动机,非裔美国学生可能在父母和朋友的感知规范影响方面与白人学生有所不同。本研究检验了种族在感知规范与大麻使用及相关问题之间关系中的调节作用。使用大麻的本科生(N = 103;78.6%为女性)完成了一项在线调查。种族调节了关于父母的禁令性规范与大麻相关问题严重程度之间的关系,即在非裔美国学生中(而非白人学生中),认可更宽松的父母禁令性规范与更高的大麻相关问题严重程度相关(但与大麻使用频率无关)。种族与描述性规范之间或种族与同伴禁令性规范之间的交互作用不显著。那些认为父母对使用大麻更为宽容的非裔美国学生可能尤其面临与大麻相关问题的风险。研究结果强调了在识别与大麻问题相关的脆弱因素时考虑文化因素的重要性。