Authors
Samantha G Farris, Jane Metrik, Marcel O Bonn-Miller, Christopher W Kahler, Michael J Zvolensky
Publication date
2016/11
Journal
Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs
Volume
77
Issue
6
Pages
889-897
Publisher
Rutgers University
Description
Objective
The tendency to react with fear to anxiety-related sensations (anxiety sensitivity) and the inability to tolerate distressing psychological or physiological states (distress intolerance) are implicated in the comorbidity between affective psychopathology and cannabis use disorders. Emotionally vulnerable cannabis users may be particularly apt to use cannabis to cope with distress, which may both lead to and maintain its problematic use (e.g., dependence, craving). The current study tested a comprehensive model of anxiety sensitivity and distress intolerance as predictors of the number of cannabis dependence symptoms and problems, and severity of cannabis craving following deprivation from cannabis, and the mediating role of cannabis coping motives.
Method
Participants (n = 103; mean age = 21.2 years, SD = 4.3; 35.9% female) were non–treatment-seeking frequent cannabis users. Data were cross …
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