College of Nursing, The Ohio State University, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, USA.
Addict Behav. 2022 Nov;134:107397. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2022.107397. Epub 2022 Jun 9.
Sexual minority women and gender diverse individuals (SMWGD) are at heightened risk for alcohol and cannabis use disorders compared to heterosexual and cisgender individuals, and their heightened risk has been attributed to minority stress. However, few longitudinal studies have examined mechanisms through which minority stress may impact substance use, and none have done so at the event-level.
We utilized data from a 30-day ecological momentary assessment study of 429 SMWGD who used alcohol or cannabis regularly to test a mechanistic process in which minority stress predicts alcohol and cannabis use via coping motives for use at the event-level.
When individuals experienced more enacted stigma (e.g., microaggressions) than usual during one assessment, they were more likely to use cannabis to cope during the next. In turn, occasions when cannabis was used to cope were marked by more sessions of cannabis use, longer intoxication, higher subjective intoxication, and more cannabis consequences. Indirect effects of enacted stigma on cannabis use via coping motives were significant. However, only one of internalized stigma's indirect effects was significant, with internalized stigma predicting cannabis consequences via daily coping motives. No indirect effects predicting alcohol use were significant.
Findings provide robust evidence that using to cope is a mechanism through which enacted stigma predicts cannabis use and internalized stigma predicts cannabis consequences. Results did not provide evidence for similar associations for alcohol. Our findings suggest that interventions designed to reduce cannabis use among SMWGD should attend to their minority stress experiences and cannabis use motives and teach alternative coping strategies.
与异性恋和顺性别个体相比,性少数群体女性和性别多样化个体(SMWGD)患酒精和大麻使用障碍的风险更高,而他们的高风险归因于少数群体压力。然而,很少有纵向研究探讨少数群体压力如何通过使用动机在事件层面上影响物质使用的机制,也没有研究过这一点。
我们利用了一项对 429 名经常使用酒精或大麻的 SMWGD 进行的 30 天生态瞬间评估研究的数据,以检验一种机制,即少数群体压力通过使用动机预测酒精和大麻的使用,而使用动机是在事件层面上预测的。
当个体在一次评估中经历的被执行的耻辱感(例如微侵犯)比平时多,他们在下一次更有可能使用大麻来应对。反过来,使用大麻来应对的场合,大麻的使用次数更多,醉酒时间更长,主观醉酒程度更高,大麻的后果也更多。被执行的耻辱感通过应对动机对大麻使用的间接影响是显著的。然而,只有内化耻辱感的一个间接影响是显著的,内化耻辱感通过日常应对动机预测大麻的后果。没有预测酒精使用的间接影响是显著的。
这些发现提供了强有力的证据,表明应对是执行耻辱感预测大麻使用和内化耻辱感预测大麻后果的一个机制。结果没有为酒精提供类似的关联证据。我们的研究结果表明,旨在减少 SMWGD 中大麻使用的干预措施应该关注他们的少数群体压力经历和大麻使用动机,并教授替代的应对策略。