1. Associations between emotional reactivity to stress and adolescent substance use: Differences by sex and valence
- Author
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Rahal, Danny, Bower, Julienne E, Irwin, Michael R, and Fuligni, Andrew J
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Paediatrics ,Psychology ,Social Determinants of Health ,Minority Health ,Health Disparities ,Brain Disorders ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Underage Drinking ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Substance Misuse ,Women's Health ,Clinical Research ,Cannabinoid Research ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Male ,Female ,Stress ,Psychological ,Longitudinal Studies ,Sex Factors ,Emotions ,Adolescent Behavior ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Alcohol Drinking ,Depression ,Marijuana Use ,Anxiety ,adolescence ,daily diary ,drug use ,emotion response ,interpersonal stress ,Public Health and Health Services ,Business and Management ,Psychiatry ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
Although stress is often related to substance use, it remains unclear whether substance use is related to individual differences in how adolescents respond to stress. Therefore the present study examined associations between substance use and daily emotional reactivity to stress within a year across adolescence. Adolescents (N = 330; Mage = 16.40, SD = 0.74 at study entry; n = 186 female; n = 138 Latine; n = 101 European American; n = 72 Asian American; n = 19 identifying as another ethnicity including African American and Middle Eastern) completed a longitudinal study, including three assessments between the 10th grade and 3-years post-high school. At each assessment, participants reported frequency of alcohol and cannabis use and the number of substances they had ever used. They also completed 15 daily checklists, in which they reported the number of daily arguments and their daily emotion. Multilevel models suggested that more frequent alcohol and cannabis use were related to attenuated positive emotional reactivity to daily stress (i.e., smaller declines in positive emotion on days when they experienced more arguments) for both male and female adolescents. Associations for negative emotional reactivity to stress varied by sex; more frequent alcohol use and use of more substances in one's lifetime were related to greater anxious emotional reactivity to stress among female adolescents, whereas more frequent alcohol and cannabis use and higher lifetime substance use were related to attenuated depressive emotional reactivity to stress among male adolescents. Taken together, substance use was related to emotional reactivity to daily stress within the same year during adolescence, although associations differed by valence and adolescent sex.
- Published
- 2024