» Articles » PMID: 27107848

Who Are the Adolescents Saying "No" to Cannabis Offers

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2016 Apr 25
PMID 27107848
Citations 11
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background And Aims: Adolescents who refuse direct cannabis offers and remain non-users represent a potentially very informative, yet surprisingly understudied group. We examined a range of risk and protective factors putatively associated with this poorly understood "cannabis-resilient" profile.

Methods: Paper-and-pencil questionnaires assessing substance use, peer and family relations, and behavioral and personality characteristics were completed by 19,303 middle- and high-school students from 82 schools in Norway (response rate 84%)

Results: The lifetime prevalence of cannabis use was 7.6%. Another 10.4% reported no use of the drug despite having received recent cannabis offers. Results from the multinomial logistic regression revealed a set of characteristics differentiating adolescents who resisted such offers from those who: (a) neither received the offers nor used, and, more importantly, (b) used the drug. Specifically, parent-child relationship quality, negative drug-related beliefs, absence of close relationships with cannabis-users, low delinquency, no regular tobacco use, and infrequent alcohol intoxication were all associated with increased odds of being in the cannabis-resilient vs. cannabis-user group. This pattern of results was comparable across middle- and high-school cohorts, but the parent-child relationship quality and delinquency were significantly associated with cannabis-resilient vs. cannabis-use outcome only among younger and older adolescents, respectively.

Conclusions: Among other low-risk characteristics, better relationships with parents and beliefs that drug use is problematic were associated with adolescents' refusals to accept cannabis offers. These results may have implications for novel preventive strategies targeting cannabis-exposed adolescents.

Citing Articles

The influence of peer's social networks on adolescent's cannabis use: a systematic review of longitudinal studies.

Torrejon-Guirado M, Baena-Jimenez M, Lima-Serrano M, de Vries H, Mercken L Front Psychiatry. 2024; 14:1306439.

PMID: 38188050 PMC: 10768034. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1306439.


Experience of psychologists in the delivery of cognitive behaviour therapy in a non-western culture for treatment of substance abuse: a qualitative study.

Azad A, Khan S, Ali I, Shafi H, Khan N, Umar S Int J Ment Health Syst. 2022; 16(1):55.

PMID: 36443829 PMC: 9703777. DOI: 10.1186/s13033-022-00566-3.


Cannabis use and associated factors among 15-16-year-old adolescents in Estonia 2003-2019: Results from cross-sectional ESPAD surveys.

Tamson M, Vorobjov S, Sokurova D, Parna K Nordisk Alkohol Nark. 2022; 38(3):293-304.

PMID: 35310615 PMC: 8899255. DOI: 10.1177/14550725211003415.


Cannabis Policy Changes and Adolescent Cannabis Use: Evidence from Europe.

Benedetti E, Resce G, Brunori P, Molinaro S Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021; 18(10).

PMID: 34068202 PMC: 8152978. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18105174.


The role of negative emotional reactivity and neighborhood factors in predicting marijuana use during early adolescence.

Tache R, Rabinowitz J, Gepty A, Lambert S, Reboussin B, Reynolds M J Adolesc. 2020; 85:32-40.

PMID: 33038686 PMC: 9109817. DOI: 10.1016/j.adolescence.2020.09.002.