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Subjective effects of simultaneous alcohol and cannabis versus alcohol-only use: A qualitative analysis.

Jack T. Waddell, Jennifer E. Merrill, Sarah A. Okey, Ricardo Woods-Gonzalez, William R. Corbin

2023Psychology of Addictive Behaviors24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Theoretical models of addictive behavior suggest that subjective effects serve as a mechanism through which substance use disorders develop. However, little is known about the subjective effects of simultaneous alcohol and cannabis use, particularly whether simultaneous use (a) heightens specific subjective effects or (b) is related to unique subjective effects relative to single-substance effects. The present study used formative, qualitative data analysis to examine patterns of responses within open-answer text response data on subjective effects of simultaneous use. METHOD: = 443; 68.2% female) were asked to describe how alcohol effects differ on simultaneous alcohol and cannabis use versus alcohol-only use days. RESULTS: = 44). CONCLUSIONS: Subjective effects from simultaneous use largely map onto domains of single-substance alcohol and cannabis effects (e.g., relaxation, sociability, cognitive/behavioral impairment), but also include distinct domains related to simultaneous use (e.g., balancing/replacement effects, altered sensation and perception). Future quantitative research is needed to validate measures of subjective effects from simultaneous use and their relations with use behavior. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyCannabisAddictionQualitative analysisAlcoholClinical psychologyMechanism (biology)Qualitative researchPsychiatryChemistryEpistemologySocial scienceBiochemistryPhilosophySociologySubstance Abuse Treatment and OutcomesCannabis and Cannabinoid ResearchPsychedelics and Drug Studies