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Linden-Carmichael, A. N., Stull, S. W., & Lanza, S. T. (2024). Addictive Behaviors. Advance online publication.
Co-use of alcohol and cannabis is prevalent and linked with heightened risk for substance-related harms. The current study investigated the role of substance-related pleasure as a reinforcing factor for co-use relative to alcohol or cannabis use. Specifically, we used data from a 21-day diary study of college students to examine day-level associations between co-use and self-reported substance-related pleasure (any, level of pleasure).
Participants were 237 college students (65 % female sex at birth, ages 18–24) who reported 1+ alcohol and cannabis co-use occasion. Participants completed daily surveys across 21 consecutive days about yesterday’s substance use and experiences of pleasure, yielding 2,086 daily surveys involving alcohol and/or cannabis use.
Multilevel models indicated that odds of substance-related pleasure were higher on days with co-use relative to days with single-substance use, and level of pleasure was higher on co-use days relative to cannabis but not alcohol use days. Pleasure may serve as a reinforcing property of co-use that may be related to continued use despite experience of negative consequences. Intensity of pleasure related to co-use appears to be largely driven by use of alcohol. However, given mixed findings concerning level of pleasure, individuals may report co-use increases feelings of pleasure but do not actually experience more pleasure. Pleasure may serve as a viable target in future prevention and intervention programming targeting co-use.
Highlights
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Odds of substance-related pleasure were higher on days with co-use of alcohol and cannabis relative to days with single-substance use.
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Level of pleasure was higher on co-use days relative to cannabis but not alcohol use days.
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Pleasure may be a reinforcing property of co-use that may be related to continued use despite experience of negative consequences.
Publication Type: Journal Article
Focus Area: Foundational Science