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Environmental cues and attempts to change in daily cannabis users: An intensive longitudinal study.


ABSTRACT: We tested whether environmental cues prompt or inhibit quit or reduction attempts among heavy cannabis users.We recruited 196 daily cannabis users who intended to stop or reduce at some point in the next 3 months. Users called an Interactive Voice Response system daily over 3 months to report on cues that might prompt an attempt to quit or reduce (e.g., a request to stop), cues that might inhibit a quit/reduction attempt (e.g., someone offering cannabis), cannabis use, and attempts to stop or reduce cannabis. No treatment was provided.Our major findings were (a) cost and health/psychological problems were the most common prompting cues, and seeing others use and being offered cannabis were the most common inhibiting cues, (b) the number of different types of prompting cues prospectively predicted an increase in attempts to change in a dose-related manner, (c) more proximal cues appeared to be more strongly related to change, (d) requests to stop or reduce, and physical or psychological problems from cannabis, best predicted change attempts, and (e) inhibiting cues did not consistently predict the probability of an attempt to change.These preliminary results suggest several environmental cues prompt attempts to change cannabis use. Thus, interventions to increase the frequency of these cues, and specifically requests to stop or reduce cannabis use, and reinforcing concerns about health and mental adverse events from cannabis use, may increase cannabis reduction or cessation.

SUBMITTER: Hughes JR 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4792644 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Environmental cues and attempts to change in daily cannabis users: An intensive longitudinal study.

Hughes John R JR   Naud Shelly S   Budney Alan J AJ   Fingar James R JR   Callas Peter W PW  

Drug and alcohol dependence 20160206


<h4>Introduction</h4>We tested whether environmental cues prompt or inhibit quit or reduction attempts among heavy cannabis users.<h4>Methods</h4>We recruited 196 daily cannabis users who intended to stop or reduce at some point in the next 3 months. Users called an Interactive Voice Response system daily over 3 months to report on cues that might prompt an attempt to quit or reduce (e.g., a request to stop), cues that might inhibit a quit/reduction attempt (e.g., someone offering cannabis), can  ...[more]

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