Division of Adolescent/Young Adult Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Jan 23;14(1):e0209963. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0209963. eCollection 2019.
Increasing numbers of youth globally live with a chronic illness. These youth use alcohol and marijuana at levels equal to or greater than their healthy peers and, when using, are at elevated risk for regular or problem use and adverse consequences to their condition. Little is known about whether behavioral theories commonly invoked to explain adolescent substance use apply to this group, limiting our ability to develop, tailor and target preventive interventions. We interviewed youth ages 16-19 years in care for a chronic disease to gain knowledge of this group's perspectives on substance use risk, decision-making, and preferences for clinical guidance. Interviews were transcribed and thematically analyzed. Three principal themes emerged: first, having a chronic disease frames understanding of and commitment to health protecting behaviors and impacts decisions to avoid behaviors that carry risks for disease complications and flares; second, developmental impulses typical of adolescence can amplify an adolescent's propensity to take risks despite medical vulnerability and direct youth toward maladaptive choices to mitigate risk; and third, poor knowledge about effects of substance use on specific features of a disease shapes perceived risk and undermines health protecting decisions. Youth navigate these issues variously including by avoiding substance use at a specific time or entirely, using while cognitively discounting risks and/or adjusting treatment outside of medical advice. Their perceptions about substance use are complex and reveal tension among choices reflecting a chronic illness frame, developmental impulses, and knowledge gaps. Delivery of targeted guidance in healthcare settings may help youth navigate this complexity and connect patient-centered goals to optimize health with health protecting behavioral decisions.
全球有越来越多的年轻人患有慢性疾病。这些年轻人的饮酒和吸食大麻的程度与健康同龄人相当或更高,并且在使用时,他们有更高的风险出现经常使用或出现问题,以及对其病情产生不利后果。对于那些通常用来解释青少年物质使用的行为理论是否适用于这一群体,我们知之甚少,这限制了我们开发、调整和针对预防干预措施的能力。我们采访了 16-19 岁患有慢性疾病的青少年,以了解他们对物质使用风险、决策以及对临床指导偏好的看法。对采访进行了转录和主题分析。出现了三个主要主题:第一,患有慢性疾病的情况会影响对健康保护行为的理解和承诺,并影响避免那些可能导致疾病恶化和发作的风险行为的决策;第二,青春期典型的发展冲动会放大青少年冒险的倾向,尽管他们存在医学上的脆弱性,但这会使他们做出不适应的选择来减轻风险;第三,对物质使用对特定疾病特征的影响缺乏了解会影响对风险的感知,并破坏健康保护决策。青少年会以各种方式来应对这些问题,包括在特定时间或完全避免使用物质,在认知上忽视风险的同时使用物质,或者在医疗建议之外调整治疗方法。他们对物质使用的看法很复杂,揭示了反映慢性疾病框架、发展冲动和知识差距的选择之间的紧张关系。在医疗保健环境中提供有针对性的指导可能有助于青少年应对这种复杂性,并将以患者为中心的目标与优化健康的健康保护行为决策联系起来。