Latent transition analysis of time-varying cannabis use motives to inform adaptive interventions.

IF 3.2 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Psychology of Addictive Behaviors Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-23 DOI:10.1037/adb0001012
Brady T West, Yongchao Ma, Stephen Lankenau, Carolyn F Wong, Erin E Bonar, Megan E Patrick, Maureen A Walton, Sean Esteban McCabe
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Abstract

Objective: The rising prevalence of daily cannabis use among older adolescents and young adults in the United States has significant public health implications. As a result, more individuals may be seeking or in need of treatment for adverse outcomes (e.g., cannabis use disorder) arising from excessive cannabis use. Our objective was to explore the potential of self-reported motives for cannabis use as a foundation for developing adaptive interventions tailored to reduce cannabis consumption over time or in certain circumstances. We aimed to understand how transitions in these motives, which can be collected with varying frequencies (yearly, monthly, daily), predict the frequency and adverse outcomes of cannabis use.

Method: We conducted secondary analyses on data collected at different frequencies from four studies: the Medical Cannabis Certification Cohort Study (n = 801, biannually), the Cannabis, Health, and Young Adults Project (n = 359, annually), the Monitoring the Future Panel Study (n = 7,851, biennially), and the Text Messaging Study (n = 87, daily). These studies collected time-varying motives for cannabis use and distal measures of cannabis use from adolescents, young adults, and adults. We applied latent transition analysis with random intercepts to analyze the data.

Results: We identified the types of transitions in latent motive classes that are predictive of adverse outcomes in the future, specifically transitions into or staying in classes characterized by multiple motives.

Conclusions: The identification of such transitions has direct implications for the development of adaptive interventions designed to prevent adverse health outcomes related to cannabis use. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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对随时间变化的大麻使用动机进行潜在过渡分析,为适应性干预措施提供信息。
目的:美国大龄青少年和年轻成年人每天吸食大麻的流行率不断上升,这对公共健康产生了重大影响。因此,可能会有更多的人因过度使用大麻导致的不良后果(如大麻使用障碍)而寻求或需要治疗。我们的目标是探索自我报告的大麻使用动机作为开发适应性干预措施的基础的潜力,以便在一段时间内或在某些情况下减少大麻消费。我们的目的是了解这些动机的转变(可以不同频率(每年、每月、每天)收集)如何预测大麻使用的频率和不良后果:我们对以下四项研究中以不同频率收集的数据进行了二次分析:医用大麻认证队列研究(n = 801,每两年一次)、大麻、健康和年轻人项目(n = 359,每年一次)、监测未来小组研究(n = 7,851,每两年一次)和短信研究(n = 87,每天一次)。这些研究收集了青少年、年轻人和成年人使用大麻的时变动机和大麻使用的远端测量数据。我们采用带有随机截距的潜伏转换分析法来分析数据:我们确定了潜在动机类别中可预测未来不良后果的过渡类型,特别是过渡到或停留在以多种动机为特征的类别中:结论:确定此类转变对开发旨在预防与使用大麻有关的不良健康后果的适应性干预措施有直接影响。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
11.80%
发文量
165
期刊介绍: Psychology of Addictive Behaviors publishes peer-reviewed original articles related to the psychological aspects of addictive behaviors. The journal includes articles on the following topics: - alcohol and alcoholism - drug use and abuse - eating disorders - smoking and nicotine addiction, and other excessive behaviors (e.g., gambling) Full-length research reports, literature reviews, brief reports, and comments are published.
期刊最新文献
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