Butler Hospital, Behavioral Medicine and Addictions Research, United States; Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, United States.
Butler Hospital, Behavioral Medicine and Addictions Research, United States; Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, United States.
Addict Behav. 2018 Apr;79:138-143. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2017.12.021. Epub 2017 Dec 20.
Cannabis use has become a more normative, socially-acceptable behavior in the United States, despite research indicating that frequent use may become problematic for some individuals. Emerging adulthood, a time of identity development, is the most common time for cannabis use. Cannabis self-concept, or one's identification with cannabis as part of their personality or identity, is one factor that may influence use behavior. This study extends previous research that reported a link between self-concept, motivational factors, and normative beliefs by evaluating relationships between cannabis self-concept, motives for use, motivation to change, perceived descriptive norms, as well as cannabis-related outcomes (use, using alone, and cannabis-related problems).
Emerging adults who used cannabis in the previous month (n=345, 53.9% male, mean age 21.0, 67.5% Non-Latino White) were recruited from a community sample for a health behaviors study. Participants were assessed for explicit cannabis self-concept, frequency of use, problems associated with use, motives for use, motivation to change, and normative beliefs about others' use.
Participants reported using cannabis on an average of 17.9 (SD=11.1) days of the previous month. Correlational analyses revealed that cannabis self-concept was positively associated with frequency of use, use-related problems, several motives for use, descriptive norms, and with using cannabis alone. Multivariate analyses revealed that rates of use, problems, and social and enhancement motives were independently and positively associated (p<0.05) with cannabis self-concept, while self-concept was negatively associated with desire to reduce cannabis use.
Cannabis self-concept may be a marker for more problematic patterns of use.
在美国,大麻的使用变得更加规范和被社会接受,尽管有研究表明,频繁使用大麻可能对某些人造成问题。成年早期是身份发展的时期,也是大麻使用最常见的时期。大麻自我概念,即一个人将大麻视为自己个性或身份的一部分的认同,是可能影响使用行为的因素之一。本研究扩展了之前的研究,该研究报告了自我概念、动机因素和规范信念之间的联系,通过评估大麻自我概念、使用动机、改变动机、感知描述性规范以及与大麻相关的结果(使用、单独使用和与大麻相关的问题)之间的关系。
从社区样本中招募了在过去一个月内使用过大麻的成年早期参与者(n=345,53.9%为男性,平均年龄为 21.0,67.5%为非拉丁裔白人)参加一项健康行为研究。参与者评估了明确的大麻自我概念、使用频率、与使用相关的问题、使用动机、改变动机以及对他人使用的规范信念。
参与者报告在过去一个月平均使用大麻 17.9(SD=11.1)天。相关分析显示,大麻自我概念与使用频率、与使用相关的问题、几种使用动机、描述性规范以及单独使用大麻呈正相关。多变量分析显示,使用频率、问题以及社交和增强动机与大麻自我概念独立且呈正相关(p<0.05),而自我概念与减少大麻使用的愿望呈负相关。
大麻自我概念可能是更具问题性使用模式的标志物。