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近期本科大麻使用者中,大麻消费与大量饮酒及酒精所致黑蒙的相互作用与大麻使用后果的关系

The Interaction of Cannabis Consumption with Heavy Episodic Drinking and Alcohol-induced Blackouts in Relation to Cannabis Use Consequences Among Recent Undergraduate College Cannabis Users.

作者信息

Guo Ying, Dai Chia-Liang, Ward Rose Marie, Mason W Alex

机构信息

University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

University of Cincinnati.

出版信息

Cannabis. 2024 Feb 23;6(4):23-32. doi: 10.26828/cannabis/2023/000193. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Risky alcohol use patterns, characterized by heavy episodic drinking (HED) and alcohol-induced blackout, are prevalent in college students. However, it is not clear if experiencing HED and blackout among college-attending cannabis users heightens risk for adverse cannabis use consequences. The purpose of this study was to examine whether heavy episodic drinking and blackout episodes moderate the relationship between cannabis consumption and cannabis use consequences among college students.

METHODS

Undergraduate college students ( = 4331) were recruited from a Midwest University in 2021. This analysis used a subset of data from past 6-month cannabis users (= 772; 17.8% of the full sample). Among cannabis users, 64.5% identified as female and 87.8% were White with an average age of 19.99 (=2.88). A linear regression was conducted with two two-way interactions of cannabis consumption and HED frequency as well as cannabis consumption and alcohol-induced blackout episodes.

RESULTS

Results showed a statistically significant positive association between cannabis consumption and cannabis use consequences (B=0.73, <.001), adjusting for the other variables in the model. Blackout, but not HED, was a significant moderator (B=0.19, =.003).

DISCUSSION

The findings of this study indicate that blackout experiences amplify the relationship between cannabis use and cannabis-related consequences among college students. This underscores that blackouts not only signal a risk of problematic drinking but also exacerbate the association between cannabis use and its negative consequences.

CONCLUSION

Findings may inform college campus interventions targeting cannabis and alcohol concurrent-users who experience alcohol-induced blackouts to reduce their additional risk for cannabis-related consequences.

摘要

引言

以大量偶尔饮酒(HED)和酒精所致记忆缺失为特征的危险饮酒模式在大学生中很普遍。然而,尚不清楚在使用大麻的大学生中经历大量偶尔饮酒和记忆缺失是否会增加不良大麻使用后果的风险。本研究的目的是检验大量偶尔饮酒和记忆缺失事件是否会调节大学生中大麻消费与大麻使用后果之间的关系。

方法

2021年从一所中西部大学招募了本科大学生(n = 4331)。本分析使用了过去6个月内大麻使用者的数据子集(n = 772;占整个样本的17.8%)。在大麻使用者中,64.5%为女性,87.8%为白人,平均年龄为19.99岁(标准差 = 2.88)。进行了一项线性回归,纳入了大麻消费与大量偶尔饮酒频率以及大麻消费与酒精所致记忆缺失事件的两个双向交互作用。

结果

在对模型中的其他变量进行调整后,结果显示大麻消费与大麻使用后果之间存在统计学上显著的正相关(B = 0.73,p <.001)。记忆缺失而非大量偶尔饮酒是一个显著的调节因素(B = 0.19,p =.003)。

讨论

本研究结果表明,记忆缺失经历会放大大学生中大麻使用与大麻相关后果之间的关系。这强调了记忆缺失不仅表明存在问题饮酒的风险,还会加剧大麻使用与其负面后果之间的关联。

结论

研究结果可为针对经历酒精所致记忆缺失的大麻和酒精同时使用者的大学校园干预措施提供参考,以降低他们面临的大麻相关后果的额外风险。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/240b/11178058/aa9ae8b57f83/rsmj-6-4-23-fig001.jpg

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