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Patterns of same-day alcohol and cannabis use in adolescents and young adults with risky alcohol use

Authors :
Erin E. Bonar
Lara N. Coughlin
Rebecca M. Cunningham
Sean D. Young
José A. Bauermeister
Amy S.B. Bohnert
Maureen A. Walton
Yazmyn Cross
Frederic C. Blow
Source :
Addiction research & theory, vol 30, iss 2, Addict Res Theory
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2022.

Abstract

Same-day alcohol and cannabis use is relatively common in adolescents and young adults, constituting a higher-risk behavior relative to single-substance use. However, the association between quantity of alcohol and cannabis use on co-use days is understudied. We examined the association between the quantity of alcohol and same-day cannabis use with a multilevel regression analysis in a sample of youth (16-24 years old) with risky alcohol use. Participants reported one or more days of alcohol and cannabis over the past month (N = 468). Quantity of cannabis use was highest on heavy drinking days [M = 0.91 grams, SD = 0.68] followed by moderate drinking days (M = 0.78 grams, SD = 0.63), and lowest on days without alcohol use (M = 0.74 grams, SD = 0.64, p < 0.001). In multilevel modeling analyses, adjusted for clustering within individuals, greater quantity of drinking on a given day was associated with greater cannabis use (estimate = 0.03, p < 0.001). When using alcohol and cannabis on the same day, greater alcohol use was associated with greater cannabis use. Preventing days of heavy use of multiple substances, particularly among at-risk drinkers, may complement interventions addressing co-use generally to prevent substance-related consequences.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Addiction research & theory, vol 30, iss 2, Addict Res Theory
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....33e9e03d275ad2b99e7fcc0de61e393d