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      Alcohol and Cannabis Use among College Students: Substitutes or Complements?

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          Abstract

          Aims

          Economists debate whether changes in availability of alcohol or cannabis are positively or negatively related to changes in use of the other substance. Implicit in these arguments are two competing, individual-level hypotheses—that people use alcohol and cannabis either as complements or substitutes for one another. This is the first study to test these hypotheses using micro-longitudinal data on individuals’ alcohol and cannabis use on a given evening.

          Methods

          United States college students who use alcohol and cannabis ( n = 876) were selected from a larger sample who participated in a 30-day online daily diary study. At baseline, students reported their proclivity to use alcohol/drugs to cope with stress. Each day students reported their level of alcohol use from the prior evening as well as whether they had used cannabis.

          Results

          Evening levels of alcohol use and mean levels of alcohol use positively predicted the likelihood of evening cannabis use, results indicative of complementary use. This relation, however, was moderated by coping style, such that students who were more likely to use alcohol/drugs to cope were less likely to use cannabis as their evening or mean alcohol use levels increased, results indicative of substitution.

          Conclusions

          Substance-using college students showed evidence for complementary alcohol and cannabis use at both the within- and between-person levels. Students with a proclivity toward using alcohol/drugs to cope, however, showed evidence of substitution. These findings suggest that studies based on economic theories of substance use should take into account individual differences in substance use motives.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          7603486
          244
          Addict Behav
          Addict Behav
          Addictive behaviors
          0306-4603
          1873-6327
          23 February 2016
          09 February 2016
          July 2016
          01 July 2017
          : 58
          : 1-6
          Affiliations
          [a ]
          [b ]
          [c ]
          Author notes
          [* ]Corresponding author: tennen@ 123456nso1.uchc.edu
          [1]

          Ross E. O’Hara is now at Persistence Plus, LLC, Boston, MA 02129, USA, rossohara.psych@ 123456gmail.com

          Article
          PMC4808449 PMC4808449 4808449 nihpa761666
          10.1016/j.addbeh.2016.02.004
          4808449
          26894560
          d3b4c36d-8a63-48cf-bedd-32089aa5017e
          History
          Categories
          Article

          Cannabis,Complement,Substitution,College student,Alcohol,Coping
          Cannabis, Complement, Substitution, College student, Alcohol, Coping

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