Monthly patterns of depressive symptoms and substance use and their relation to longer-term hazardous substance use and mental health problems: Examining mutual maintenance using monthly data from young adults
Isaac C. Rhew, Scott Graupensperger, Griselda Martinez, Christine M. Lee
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The current study examined whether young adults showing a pattern of greater substance use on months when experiencing greater levels of depressive symptoms showed long-term hazardous alcohol and cannabis use and elevated depressive symptoms. Data were from 772 young adults in Washington State (mean age = 21.1 years, SD = 1.7; 57 % female). For 24 consecutive months, surveys asked about past-month depressive symptoms and typical number of alcoholic drinks per week and typical number hours high on cannabis per week. Participants completed a survey 30 months after baseline that included measures of depressive symptoms and hazardous alcohol and cannabis use. Multilevel models showed substantial variability in monthly within-person associations of depressive symptoms with alcohol and cannabis use across individuals during the first 24 months. On months when experiencing increased depressive symptoms compared to their average, some young adults used more alcohol or cannabis and some used less. When linking outcomes at 30-month follow-up to person-specific slopes extracted from the multilevel models, results showed that young adults who tended to drink more or use more cannabis when they experienced more depressive symptoms than their average reported greater levels of hazardous alcohol and cannabis use at 30-month follow-up, respectively. Person-specific slopes were not associated with 30-month depressive symptoms. Although there was substantial variability in within-person monthly associations, findings suggest that young adults showing short-term patterns consistent with increased alcohol and cannabis use to regulate depressive symptoms may benefit from prevention and intervention efforts aimed at decreasing risk of longer-term problematic substance use.
期刊介绍:
Addictive Behaviors is an international peer-reviewed journal publishing high quality human research on addictive behaviors and disorders since 1975. The journal accepts submissions of full-length papers and short communications on substance-related addictions such as the abuse of alcohol, drugs and nicotine, and behavioral addictions involving gambling and technology. We primarily publish behavioral and psychosocial research but our articles span the fields of psychology, sociology, psychiatry, epidemiology, social policy, medicine, pharmacology and neuroscience. While theoretical orientations are diverse, the emphasis of the journal is primarily empirical. That is, sound experimental design combined with valid, reliable assessment and evaluation procedures are a requisite for acceptance. However, innovative and empirically oriented case studies that might encourage new lines of inquiry are accepted as well. Studies that clearly contribute to current knowledge of etiology, prevention, social policy or treatment are given priority. Scholarly commentaries on topical issues, systematic reviews, and mini reviews are encouraged. We especially welcome multimedia papers that incorporate video or audio components to better display methodology or findings.
Studies can also be submitted to Addictive Behaviors? companion title, the open access journal Addictive Behaviors Reports, which has a particular interest in ''non-traditional'', innovative and empirically-oriented research such as negative/null data papers, replication studies, case reports on novel treatments, and cross-cultural research.