Changes in Parent-Student Text Message and Phone Call Communication During the Transition to College as Predictors of Cannabis and Simultaneous Use During the First Year

Reed Morgan, Bradley M. Trager, Sarah Boyle, Layla Rainosek, Joseph LaBrie
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Abstract

Parent communication can be protective against cannabis use among young adults. However, changes in parent-student communication frequency naturally occur during the transition from high school to college. Recent research suggests declines in parent-student communication frequency predict increased drinking and consequences during the first year of college, yet these effects on other risky behaviors are unknown. The current study investigated whether post-matriculation changes in frequency of texting/calling with parents predict cannabis use and simultaneous use of cannabis and alcohol, and whether pre-matriculation cannabis and simultaneous use predict changes in communication. First-year students (N = 287, 61.3% female, 50.9% White) reported cannabis and simultaneous use pre- and post-matriculation (T1 & T3) and changes in frequency of texting/calling their mother/father per day (T2). Negative binomial hurdle models examined whether T2 changes in communication frequency predicted T3 cannabis and simultaneous use, and logistic regression models examined whether T1 cannabis and simultaneous use predicted T2 changes in communication frequency. Results revealed that increasing (vs. decreasing) frequency of calling with mothers and texting with fathers was protective against cannabis use, whereas increasing frequency of calling with fathers was associated with greater risk of use. Changes in communication did not significantly predict simultaneous use, nor did pre-matriculation cannabis or simultaneous use predict changes in either mode of communication with parents during the college transition. These findings highlight that changes in mother and father communication may be both beneficial and detrimental to cannabis use depending on the parent and mode of communication. Implications for these findings are discussed.
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升入大学期间家长与学生短信和电话沟通的变化是第一年吸食大麻和同时吸食大麻的预测因素
父母之间的沟通可以防止青少年吸食大麻。然而,在从高中到大学的过渡时期,家长与学生之间的沟通频率自然会发生变化。最近的研究表明,父母与学生之间沟通频率的下降预示着大学第一年饮酒量的增加及其后果,但这些变化对其他危险行为的影响尚不清楚。本研究调查了入学后与父母发短信/打电话频率的变化是否会预测大麻使用情况以及同时使用大麻和酒精的情况,以及入学前大麻使用情况和同时使用大麻和酒精的情况是否会预测沟通的变化。一年级新生(人数 = 287,61.3% 为女性,50.9% 为白人)报告了入学前后(T1 和 T3)使用大麻和同时使用酒精的情况,以及每天给母亲/父亲发短信/打电话的频率变化(T2)。负二项式障碍模型检验了 T2 通讯频率的变化是否能预测 T3 大麻和同时使用大麻的情况,逻辑回归模型检验了 T1 大麻和同时使用大麻的情况是否能预测 T2 通讯频率的变化。结果显示,与母亲通话和与父亲发短信频率的增加(与减少)对吸食大麻具有保护作用,而与父亲通话频率的增加则与吸食大麻的更大风险相关。沟通方式的变化并不能显著预测同时吸食大麻的情况,入学前吸食大麻或同时吸食大麻也不能预测大学过渡期间与父母沟通方式的变化。这些研究结果突出表明,父母沟通方式的变化可能对吸食大麻有利也有弊,具体取决于父母和沟通方式。本文讨论了这些发现的意义。
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