51. Dampened psychobiological responses to stress and substance use in adolescence.
- Author
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Rahal, Danny, Shirtcliff, Elizabeth A, Fuligni, Andrew, Kogut, Katherine, Gonzales, Nancy, Johnson, Megan, Eskenazi, Brenda, and Deardorff, Julianna
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Pediatric ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Substance Misuse ,Women's Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Social Determinants of Health ,Prevention ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Underage Drinking ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,No Poverty ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Female ,Male ,Ethnicity ,Nicotine ,Hydrocortisone ,Minority Groups ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Stress ,Psychological ,adolescence ,cortisol ,emotion ,stress response ,substance use ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Substance use increases throughout adolescence, and earlier substance use may increase risk for poorer health. However, limited research has examined whether stress responses relate to adolescent substance use, especially among adolescents from ethnic minority and high-adversity backgrounds. The present study assessed whether blunted emotional and cortisol responses to stress at age 14 related to substance use by ages 14 and 16, and whether associations varied by poverty status and sex. A sample of 277 Mexican-origin youth (53.19% female; 68.35% below the poverty line) completed a social-evaluative stress task, which was culturally adapted for this population, and provided saliva samples and rated their anger, sadness, and happiness throughout the task. They also reported whether they had ever used alcohol, marijuana, cigarettes, and vaping of nicotine at age 14 and again at age 16. Multilevel models suggested that blunted cortisol reactivity to stress was associated with alcohol use by age 14 and vaping nicotine by age 16 among youth above the poverty line. Also, blunted sadness and happiness reactivity to stress was associated with use of marijuana and alcohol among female adolescents. Blunted stress responses may be a risk factor for substance use among youth above the poverty line and female adolescents.
- Published
- 2023