Cannabis use and sleep problems among young adults by mental health status: A prospective cohort study.

IF 5.2 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY Addiction Pub Date : 2024-10-30 DOI:10.1111/add.16705
Claire A Walsh, Erin Euler, Lauren A Do, Amy Zheng, Sandrah P Eckel, Bernard L Harlow, Adam M Leventhal, Jessica L Barrington-Trimis, Alyssa F Harlow
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Abstract

Background and aims: Young adult cannabis use is common; while cannabis is often marketed as a product that can improve sleep, evidence supporting these claims is limited, and effects may differ for individuals with underlying mental health issues. This study measured the association between cannabis use and sleep problems among young adults and determined whether associations differ by mental health status.

Design, setting and participants: Using two waves of a young adult cohort study (baseline: March-September 2020; follow-up: January-June 2021), we measured the association of cannabis use frequency with subsequent sleep problems overall and stratified by baseline sleep quality and mental health status in separate moderation analyses. This study was conducted in Southern California, USA, and included 1926 participants aged 20-23 years (mean age = 21; 61% female, 46% Hispanic).

Measurements: Exposure was baseline cannabis use frequency (never use, prior use, 1-5 days/month, 6-19 days/month, ≥ 20 days/month). The outcome was sleep problems at follow-up (range = 4-24, higher score indicating worse sleep). Models were adjusted for socio-demographic factors, baseline sleep problems, mental health symptoms (depression and/or anxiety versus neither) and past 30-day nicotine or alcohol use. In moderation analyses, models were additionally stratified by mental health symptoms and baseline sleep quality (excellent versus imperfect sleep).

Findings: Among the young adult sample, 11% used cannabis ≥ 20 days/month at baseline. For participants without baseline anxiety or depression symptoms, using cannabis ≥ 20 days/month (versus never use) was associated with greater sleep problems at follow-up [mean difference (MD) = 1.66, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.59-2.74]. Among participants with anxiety and/or depression and pre-existing sleep problems at baseline, using cannabis ≥ 20 days/month (versus never use) was associated with fewer sleep problems at follow-up (MD = -1.42, 95% CI = -2.81 to -0.02).

Conclusions: The effects of cannabis use on sleep appear to differ by underlying mental health symptoms. Frequent cannabis use may improve sleep for young adults with depression and/or anxiety who have pre-existing sleep problems, but worsen sleep for young adults without depression and/or anxiety.

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按精神健康状况划分的年轻人吸食大麻和睡眠问题:一项前瞻性队列研究。
背景和目的:青壮年吸食大麻的现象很普遍;虽然大麻经常被推销为可以改善睡眠的产品,但支持这些说法的证据却很有限,而且对有潜在心理健康问题的人的影响也可能不同。本研究测量了年轻成年人使用大麻与睡眠问题之间的关联,并确定不同的精神健康状况是否会产生不同的关联:我们利用一项年轻成年人队列研究的两次波次(基线:2020 年 3 月至 9 月;随访:2021 年 1 月至 6 月),测量了大麻使用频率与后续睡眠问题之间的总体关联,并在单独的调节分析中根据基线睡眠质量和精神健康状况进行了分层。这项研究在美国南加州进行,包括 1926 名 20-23 岁的参与者(平均年龄 = 21 岁;61% 为女性,46% 为西班牙裔):暴露是基线大麻使用频率(从未使用、曾使用、1-5 天/月、6-19 天/月、≥ 20 天/月)。结果是随访时的睡眠问题(范围 = 4-24,得分越高表示睡眠越差)。根据社会人口因素、基线睡眠问题、心理健康症状(抑郁和/或焦虑与两者均无)以及过去 30 天尼古丁或酒精使用情况对模型进行了调整。在调节分析中,模型还根据心理健康症状和基线睡眠质量(睡眠极佳与不佳)进行了分层:在青壮年样本中,11%的人基线使用大麻的天数≥20天/月。对于没有基线焦虑或抑郁症状的参与者,每月吸食大麻≥20 天(与从未吸食大麻相比)与随访时睡眠问题更严重有关[平均差(MD)= 1.66,95% 置信区间(CI)= 0.59-2.74]。在基线时患有焦虑症和/或抑郁症并已存在睡眠问题的参与者中,每月吸食大麻≥20 天(与从未吸食大麻相比)与随访时睡眠问题较少有关(MD = -1.42, 95% CI = -2.81 to -0.02):吸食大麻对睡眠的影响似乎因潜在的精神健康症状而异。经常吸食大麻可能会改善患有抑郁症和/或焦虑症并已存在睡眠问题的年轻人的睡眠,但会恶化没有抑郁症和/或焦虑症的年轻人的睡眠。
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来源期刊
Addiction
Addiction 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
10.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
319
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Addiction publishes peer-reviewed research reports on pharmacological and behavioural addictions, bringing together research conducted within many different disciplines. Its goal is to serve international and interdisciplinary scientific and clinical communication, to strengthen links between science and policy, and to stimulate and enhance the quality of debate. We seek submissions that are not only technically competent but are also original and contain information or ideas of fresh interest to our international readership. We seek to serve low- and middle-income (LAMI) countries as well as more economically developed countries. Addiction’s scope spans human experimental, epidemiological, social science, historical, clinical and policy research relating to addiction, primarily but not exclusively in the areas of psychoactive substance use and/or gambling. In addition to original research, the journal features editorials, commentaries, reviews, letters, and book reviews.
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