Substance Use Motives as Mediators of the Associations between Self-Control Constructs and Negative Substance Use Consequences: A Cross-Cultural Examination

Zannie Montgomery, Yanina Michelini, Adrian Bravo, A. Pilatti, Laura Mezquita
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Abstract

The present study sought to examine three distinct research questions: a) are self-control constructs (i.e., negative/positive urgency, self-regulation, and emotion-regulation) indirectly related to negative alcohol/marijuana consequences via substance use motives, b) to what extent are these indirect effects consistent across differing drugs (i.e., alcohol and marijuana), and c) are these models invariant across gender and countries. Participants were 2,230 college students (mean age=20.28, SD=0.40; 71.1% females) across 7 countries (USA, Canada, Spain, England, Argentina, Uruguay, and South Africa) who consumed alcohol and marijuana in the last month. Two (one for alcohol and one for marijuana) fully saturated path models were conducted, such that indirect paths were examined for each self-control construct and substance use motive on negative consequences (e.g., negative urgency → coping motives → negative consequences) within the same model. Within the comprehensive alcohol model, we found that lower self-regulation and higher negative urgency/suppression were related to more alcohol consequences via higher coping and conformity motives. For marijuana, we found that lower self-regulation and higher negative urgency/suppression were related to more marijuana consequences via higher coping motives (not significant for conformity motives). Unique to marijuana, we did find support for higher expansion motives indirectly linking positive urgency to more negative consequences. These results were invariant across gender groups and only minor differences across countries emerged. Prevention and intervention programs of alcohol and marijuana around university campuses may benefit from targeting self-control related skills in addition to motives to drug use to prevent and reduce negative drug-related consequences.
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药物使用动机是自我控制结构与药物使用负面后果之间关联的中介:跨文化研究
本研究试图探讨三个不同的研究问题:a) 自我控制结构(即消极/积极紧迫感、自我调节和情绪调节)是否通过药物使用动机与酒精/大麻的负面后果间接相关;b) 这些间接影响在不同药物(即酒精和大麻)之间的一致性程度如何;c) 这些模型在不同性别和国家之间是否不变。参与者为 7 个国家(美国、加拿大、西班牙、英国、阿根廷、乌拉圭和南非)的 2230 名大学生(平均年龄=20.28,SD=0.40;71.1% 为女性),他们在过去一个月内消费过酒精和大麻。我们建立了两个(一个针对酒精,一个针对大麻)完全饱和的路径模型,从而在同一模型中考察了每个自我控制建构和药物使用动机对负面后果的间接路径(例如,负面紧迫性 → 应对动机 → 负面后果)。在酒精综合模型中,我们发现较低的自我调节能力和较高的消极紧迫感/压抑感通过较高的应对动机和顺从动机与更多的酒精后果相关。对于大麻,我们发现较低的自我调节能力和较高的消极紧迫感/压抑感通过较高的应对动机与较多的大麻后果相关(一致性动机不显著)。对于大麻,我们确实发现较高的扩张动机间接地将积极的紧迫感与更多的消极后果联系在一起。这些结果在不同性别群体中都是不变的,只是在不同国家之间出现了细微差别。在大学校园内开展的酒精和大麻预防和干预计划,除了针对吸毒动机外,还可以针对与自我控制相关的技能,以预防和减少与毒品相关的负面后果。
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