Cross-substance Effects of Adolescent Exposure to Alcohol Content in Popular Movies on Cannabis Initiation

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Abstract

Objective: Alcohol is the most frequently depicted substance in the media, and adolescent exposure to alcohol in the media predicts alcohol use. There is relatively little research on exposure to cannabis in the media, but exposure to alcohol content may exert cross-substance effects on cannabis use. Given the social and health risks associated with early cannabis use, the present study aims to assess the cross-substance effects of exposure to alcohol media content on age of cannabis initiation. Method: A sample of 830 middle school students (53% female) reported on movie alcohol exposure and cannabis initiation longitudinally until high school completion. Discrete-time survival models examined whether movie alcohol exposure predicted subsequent initiation among students who were cannabis-naïve at baseline, controlling for demographic, social, and behavioral covariates. The interaction between sex and movie alcohol exposure was also explored. Results: One third (33%) of participants reported cannabis initiation with a mean of 5.57 estimated hours (SD = 4.29) of movie alcohol exposure. A 1-hour increase in movie exposure predicted a significant 16% increased probability of cannabis initiation in models adjusted for demographic variables and a significant 14% increase in models adjusted for demographic, behavioral, and social variables. No differences were observed across sex. Conclusions: Greater adolescent exposure to alcohol content in the media was associated with earlier cannabis initiation above and beyond other etiologically relevant demographic, behavioral, and social variables. The influence of cross-substance media exposures warrants further exploration and should be taken into consideration in the development of preventive interventions for youth substance use.

Author Biographies

Erin Corcoran, M.S., University of Florida, College of Public Health & Health Professions

Doctoral Candidate, Department of Clinical and Health Psychology

Tim Janssen, Ph.D., Brown University School of Public Health 

Assistant Professor, Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies

Joy Gabrielli, Ph.D., University of Florida, College of Public Health & Health Professions

Assistant Professor, Department of Clinical and Health Psychology

Kristina Jackson, Ph.D., Brown University School of Public Health 

Professor (Research), Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences

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Published

2024-06-26

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Section

Original Report