Early and Late Adolescent Factors that Predict Co-use of Cannabis with Alcohol and Tobacco in Young Adulthood

被引:0
作者
Elizabeth J. D’Amico
Anthony Rodriguez
Joan S. Tucker
Michael S. Dunbar
Eric R. Pedersen
Regina A. Shih
Jordan P. Davis
Rachana Seelam
机构
[1] RAND Corporation,
[2] RAND Corporation,undefined
[3] RAND Corporation,undefined
[4] RAND Corporation,undefined
[5] University of Southern California,undefined
来源
Prevention Science | 2020年 / 21卷
关键词
Adolescents; Young adults; Marijuana; Cannabis; Alcohol; Co-use; Functioning;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The changing legal landscape of cannabis in the USA has coincided with changes in how cannabis is used, including its co-use with other substances. This study analyzed 10 years of data from a diverse cohort of youth (N = 2429; 54% Hispanic, 16% Asian, 16% white, 3% black, 10% multiracial) to examine predictors in early and late adolescence of co-use of alcohol with cannabis (AC) and tobacco with cannabis (TC) at age 21. Two forms of co-use were examined: concurrent (use of both substances in past month) and sequential (use of one substance right after the other). Analyses focused on four predictor domains: individual (e.g., resistance self-efficacy), peer (e.g., time spent around peers who use), family (e.g., sibling use), and neighborhood (i.e., perceived alcohol and drug problems in neighborhood). For each co-use combination (AC or TC), we estimated parallel process piecewise latent growth models in a structural equation modeling framework using Mplus v8. The final AC and TC co-use models included all predictor variables from the four domains. Increases in positive expectancies and time spent around peers who use AC, as well as steeper decreases in resistance self-efficacy, were all related to a greater likelihood of AC co-use in young adulthood. Increases in sibling TC use and time spent around peers who use TC, as well as steeper decreases in resistance self-efficacy, were all related to a greater likelihood of TC co-use in young adulthood. Overall, findings highlight the importance of addressing peer influence in prevention programming during both early and late adolescence.
引用
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页码:530 / 544
页数:14
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