Vogel Erin A, Romm Katelyn F, Massey Zachary B, Cohn Amy M
TSET Health Promotion Research Center, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences, 655 Research Parkway, Suite 400, Oklahoma City, OK 73104, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences, 1200 Children's Ave. Ste 14000, Oklahoma City, OK 73104, USA.
Prev Med Rep. 2025 Jun 5;55:103126. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2025.103126. eCollection 2025 Jul.
Adolescents with frequent (versus infrequent) social media use display higher cannabis use prevalence. This study examined associations of social media use frequency with pro-cannabis attitudes, an actionable intervention target.
Youth aged 13-17 in Oklahoma, United States completed an online, cross-sectional survey (March-October 2023) measuring social media use frequency (0-1.5 vs. 1.5+ hours/day), pro-cannabis attitudes (e.g., "cannabis is an effective treatment for mental health problems"), past-month cannabis use (yes/no), and individual characteristics (e.g., age, tobacco use). Regression models tested associations of social media use frequency with pro-cannabis attitudes, pro-cannabis attitudes with past-month cannabis use, and social media use frequency with past-month cannabis use.
The sample ( = 409; 53.8 % female) was 58.7 % non-Hispanic [NH] White; 68.5 % used social media >1.5 hours/day; 22.7 % reported past-month cannabis use, and cannabis attitudes averaged 3.2 (SD = 1.0; 1 = less positive, 5 = more positive). In models adjusted for sex, gender, age, family finances, mental health symptoms, tobacco use, alcohol use, offline cannabis marketing exposure, and cannabis-related social media content exposure, participants endorsing more frequent social media use had greater pro-cannabis attitudes (B = 0.24, SE = 0.10; = .020). Pro-cannabis attitudes were, in turn, associated with greater odds of past-month cannabis use (aOR = 1.80, 95 % CI [1.28, 2.55]). Social media use frequency was not directly associated with past-month cannabis use ( = .344); however, past-month cannabis use prevalence was descriptively higher among youth with frequent (24.3 %) versus infrequent (19.4 %) social media use.
Adolescents with frequent social media use may develop pro-cannabis attitudes, which may be associated with future cannabis use. Prevention messaging could target attitudes.
频繁(与不频繁相对)使用社交媒体的青少年大麻使用流行率更高。本研究考察了社交媒体使用频率与支持大麻态度之间的关联,这是一个可采取行动的干预目标。
美国俄克拉荷马州13 - 17岁的青少年完成了一项在线横断面调查(2023年3月至10月),测量社交媒体使用频率(0 - 1.5小时/天与1.5小时/天以上)、支持大麻态度(例如,“大麻是治疗心理健康问题的有效方法”)、过去一个月的大麻使用情况(是/否)以及个人特征(例如,年龄、烟草使用情况)。回归模型检验了社交媒体使用频率与支持大麻态度之间的关联、支持大麻态度与过去一个月大麻使用之间的关联以及社交媒体使用频率与过去一个月大麻使用之间的关联。
样本(n = 409;53.8%为女性)中58.7%为非西班牙裔白人;68.5%的人每天使用社交媒体超过1.5小时;22.7%的人报告过去一个月使用过大麻,支持大麻态度的平均得分为3.2(标准差 = 1.0;1 = 不太积极,5 = 更积极)。在对性别、年龄、家庭经济状况、心理健康症状、烟草使用、酒精使用、线下大麻营销接触以及与大麻相关的社交媒体内容接触进行调整的模型中,认可更频繁使用社交媒体的参与者支持大麻的态度更强(B = 0.24,标准误 = 0.10;p = 0.020)。支持大麻的态度反过来又与过去一个月使用大麻的更高几率相关(调整后的比值比 = 1.80,95%置信区间[1.28, 2.55])。社交媒体使用频率与过去一个月的大麻使用没有直接关联(p = 0.344);然而,从描述性数据来看,频繁使用社交媒体的青少年(24.3%)过去一个月的大麻使用流行率高于不频繁使用社交媒体的青少年(19.4%)。
频繁使用社交媒体的青少年可能会形成支持大麻的态度,这可能与未来的大麻使用有关。预防信息传递可以针对这些态度。