Chen Lian-Yu, Martins Silvia S, Strain Eric C, Mojtabai Ramin, Storr Carla L
Taipei City Psychiatric Center, Taipei City Hospital, No.309, Songde Rd., Xinyi Dist., Taipei City, Taiwan.
Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 624 N. Broadway, 7th floor, Baltimore, MD 21205.
Addict Disord Their Treat. 2018 Mar;17(1):29-39. doi: 10.1097/ADT.0000000000000120.
We aimed to examine whether there are sex and age differences in psychosocial risk factors of marijuana use during adolescence.
Data were drawn from 57,767 adolescents (8 and 10 graders) from the 2012-2013 Monitoring the Future study. We examined the association between socio-demographic and behavioral correlates with different frequencies of past-year marijuana use (non-use, occasional use: <10 time, frequent use: 10-39 times, and regular use: 40+ times). We further investigated whether these associations were similar for boys and girls of different ages.
Overall, 20.6% of the adolescents reported past-year marijuana use: 12.1% occasional use, 4.3% frequent use, and 3.8% regular use. Girls were less likely to be frequent and regular marijuana users (frequent use: OR=0.83 [0.75, 0.93]; regular use: OR=0.41 [0.36, 0.48]) while no sex difference was noted for occasional use. Also, the odds of deviant behaviors were higher as the frequencies of marijuana use were higher. Compared to younger girls, older boys and girls had higher association between all levels of marijuana use and low self-esteem, low perceived harm, peer influence and perceived easy access. Besides, younger boys were more likely than younger girls to report an association between regular marijuana use with low self-esteem, peer influence, and perceived easy access but not with perceived low harm.
CONCLUSIONS/IMPORTANCE: Findings suggest the relationship between these psychosocial correlates and frequency of marijuana involvement varies across sex and age groups. These variations ask for a nuanced approach to prevention of marijuana involvement in different groups of youth.
我们旨在研究青少年时期大麻使用的心理社会风险因素是否存在性别和年龄差异。
数据来自2012 - 2013年“未来监测”研究中的57767名青少年(八年级和十年级学生)。我们研究了社会人口统计学和行为相关因素与过去一年不同频率大麻使用(不使用、偶尔使用:<10次、频繁使用:10 - 39次、经常使用:40次及以上)之间的关联。我们进一步调查了不同年龄的男孩和女孩之间这些关联是否相似。
总体而言,20.6%的青少年报告过去一年使用过大麻:12.1%偶尔使用,4.3%频繁使用,3.8%经常使用。女孩成为频繁和经常大麻使用者的可能性较小(频繁使用:比值比[OR]=0.83[0.75, 0.93];经常使用:OR = 0.41[0.36, 0.48]),而偶尔使用方面未发现性别差异。此外,随着大麻使用频率的增加,越轨行为的几率越高。与年轻女孩相比,年龄较大的男孩和女孩在所有大麻使用水平与低自尊、低感知危害、同伴影响和感知易获取性之间的关联更高。此外,较年轻的男孩比年轻女孩更有可能报告经常大麻使用与低自尊、同伴影响和感知易获取性之间的关联,但与感知低危害无关。
结论/重要性:研究结果表明,这些心理社会相关因素与大麻使用频率之间的关系在不同性别和年龄组中存在差异。这些差异要求针对不同青年群体预防大麻使用采取细致入微的方法。