Smith Crystal Lederhos, Cooper Brittany Rhoades, Miguel Andre, Hill Laura, Roll John, McPherson Sterling
Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine, Washington State University, P.O. Box 1495, Spokane, WA, 99210-1495, USA.
Human Development, Washington State University, Spokane, WA, USA.
J Cannabis Res. 2021 Jun 1;3(1):16. doi: 10.1186/s42238-021-00072-2.
Adolescents often use substances such as tobacco and cannabis. Co-use of these substances can lead to physical, mental, and psychosocial difficulties beyond that which would be anticipated by simple additivity of their individual effects.
We aimed to examine the mediating role of age at first use of cannabis or tobacco (AU) between youth factors of internalizing, externalizing, and sensation seeking and two co-use outcomes (lifetime; last 30 days). Path analytic modeling using data from youth age 12-17 who had tried cannabis or tobacco at least once in their lives and participated in the Population Assessment of Tobacco Health (PATH) waves one and two (collected 2013-2015; n=3,847; approximately 46% female) study allowed us to examine these relationships.
The lifetime use model indicated significant direct (internalizing (B = 0.18), externalizing (B = 0.30), sensation seeking (B = 0.15)) and indirect relationships (internalizing (B = 0.18), externalizing (B = 0.33), sensation seeking (B = 0.10)) between each of the three youth factors, the mediator (AU) and the lifetime co-use outcome (p < 0.05 for all). A direct relationship between AU and lifetime co-use was also observed (B = - 1.54). In the past 30-day use model, significant direct paths from AU (B = - 0.49) and sensation seeking (B = 0.06) to past 30-day use were present (p < 0.05 for all).
Examination of mediation by AU in the relationships between youth factors and youth co-use of cannabis and tobacco is an important step in understanding these complex relationships. This study is strengthened by the use of a large, nationally representative sample, yet is limited by several factors, such as the use of a secondary dataset and the use of youth self-report.
Based on the findings, programs or interventions targeting youth factors of internalizing, externalizing, and sensation seeking as well as interventions aiming to stave off AU should promote decreased tobacco and cannabis co-use. Sensation seeking and AU appear to be the most influential factors and should be considered when developing and promoting prevention policies/programs for higher risk youth populations.
青少年经常使用烟草和大麻等物质。同时使用这些物质会导致身体、心理和社会心理方面的困难,这些困难超出了其各自单独影响简单叠加所预期的范围。
我们旨在研究首次使用大麻或烟草的年龄(AU)在青少年内化、外化和寻求刺激因素与两种同时使用物质的结果(终生;过去30天)之间的中介作用。使用来自12至17岁青少年的数据进行路径分析建模,这些青少年一生中至少尝试过大麻或烟草一次,并参与了烟草健康人口评估(PATH)的第一波和第二波调查(2013 - 2015年收集;n = 3847;约46%为女性),该研究使我们能够检验这些关系。
终生使用模型表明,在三个青少年因素、中介变量(AU)和终生同时使用物质的结果之间,存在显著的直接关系(内化(B = 0.18)、外化(B = 0.30)、寻求刺激(B = 0.15))和间接关系(内化(B = 0.18)、外化(B = 0.33)、寻求刺激(B = 0.10))(所有p < 0.05)。还观察到AU与终生同时使用物质之间存在直接关系(B = -1.54)。在过去30天使用模型中,存在从AU(B = -0.49)和寻求刺激(B = 0.06)到过去30天使用的显著直接路径(所有p < 0.05)。
研究AU在青少年因素与青少年同时使用大麻和烟草关系中的中介作用,是理解这些复杂关系的重要一步。本研究因使用了一个大型的、具有全国代表性的样本而得到加强,但也受到几个因素的限制,如使用二手数据集和青少年自我报告。
基于研究结果,针对青少年内化、外化和寻求刺激因素的项目或干预措施,以及旨在避免首次使用年龄(AU)的干预措施,应促进减少烟草和大麻的同时使用。寻求刺激和首次使用年龄似乎是最具影响力的因素,在为高风险青少年群体制定和推广预防政策/项目时应予以考虑。