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Daily Reports of Positive and Negative Affect and Alcohol and Marijuana Use Among College Student and Nonstudent Young Adults

机译:大学生和非学生年轻人的积极和消极影响以及酒精和大麻的使用情况的每日报道

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Background: Daily affect and substance use covary among college students, but little is known about these associations among young adults not in college. Objectives: The current pilot study examines associations between positive and negative affect and alcohol and marijuana use, with a focus on differences between college student and nonstudent young adults. Methods: High school seniors completed a baseline survey during the spring of 2012 and were then randomly selected to participate in an intensive measurement follow-up. Participants in the follow-up (N = 72, 40.3% men, 77.8% White, 66.7% full-time college students) completed up to 14 consecutive web-based daily surveys during the fall after high school completion. Multilevel models in which days (Level 1) were nested in persons (Level 2) were estimated. Results: Weekend days were associated with increased alcohol use among all young adults, increased marijuana use among college students, and decreased marijuana use among nonstudents. For young adults not in college, greater daily positive affect was associated with increased likelihood of binge drinking, consuming a greater number of drinks, and lower odds of marijuana use; greater daily negative affect was associated with lower odds of alcohol use and lower odds of binge drinking for non-students. For college students, greater daily negative affect was associated with lower odds of marijuana use. Conclusions/Importance: Daily affect and alcohol and marijuana use covary among young adults, though these associations differ between students and non-students. Results highlight the need to examine predictors of alcohol and marijuana use among young adults who do not attend college.
机译:背景:大学生的日常情感和物质使用习惯会变幻莫测,但是对于不在大学里的年轻人来说,这些关联却鲜为人知。目标:当前的初步研究检查了正面和负面影响与饮酒和大麻的使用之间的关联,重点是大学生和非学生年轻人之间的差异。方法:高中生在2012年春季完成了基线调查,然后随机选择参加强化测量随访。随访的参与者(N = 72,男性40.3%,白人77.8%,全日制大学生66.7%)在高中毕业后的秋季完成了多达14个连续的基于网络的每日调查。估计其中人(第2级)嵌套了天数(第1级)的多层模型。结果:周末天与所有年轻成年人的饮酒增加,大学生的大麻使用增加以及非学生的大麻使用减少有关。对于未上大学的年轻成年人,每日积极影响更大与暴饮暴食的可能性增加,饮酒次数增加以及使用大麻的几率降低有关;每天更大的负面影响与非学生饮酒的几率降低和狂饮的几率降低有关。对于大学生来说,每天更大的负面影响与使用大麻的几率降低有关。结论/重要性:年轻人和成年人之间的日常影响以及酗酒和吸大麻的习惯,尽管这些关联在学生和非学生之间有所不同。结果强调需要检查未上大学的年轻人中酒精和大麻使用的预测指标。

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