Reactivity to Daily Self-Monitoring of Cannabis Use in Biological Females

Authors

  • Jason Isaacs Dalhousie University
  • Sean MacKinnon Dalhousie University
  • Kayla Joyce University of Manitoba
  • Sherry Stewart Dalhousie University

Abstract

Assessment reactivity involves changes to behaviours from self-monitoring those behaviours (Nelson & Hayes, 1981). In the substance use field, reactivity has been identified both as a potential confound in daily diary research (Cohn et al., 2015) and as a possible intervention tool in clinical practice (Cohn et al., 2018). Reactivity to daily self-monitoring of alcohol and tobacco use has been inconsistent in prior research. Reactivity to daily self-monitoring of cannabis use quantity has received far less study. This study involved secondary analyses of data from N = 88 females who self-monitored their cannabis use for 32 days. We examined objective reactivity of cannabis use to daily self-monitoring by assessing changes in daily cannabis use over 32 days. We also explored participants’ perceptions of the impact daily selfmonitoring had on their cannabis use at study completion (i.e., subjective reactivity). In hurdle models testing objective reactivity, neither probability of cannabis use, nor quantity of cannabis use, changed significantly over the study period. Many respondents (45%) reported no subjective reactivity, though a slight majority (55%) reported some subjective reactivity. Subjective reactivity did not moderate objective reactivity over time; however, higher subjective reactivity was significantly associated with increased variability (interquartile range [IQR]) in cannabis use across the self-monitoring period. Overall, reactivity appears unlikely to confound research utilizing daily diary cannabis measures, and daily self-monitoring of cannabis use may be unlikely to serve as a useful stand-alone intervention for reducing cannabis use in non-treatment-seeking individuals. Potential clinical implications of the novel finding of a link between subjective reactivity and objective cannabis use variability are discussed.

Author Biographies

Jason Isaacs, Dalhousie University

Clinical Psychology Graduate Student, BA, Department of Psychology & Neuroscience

Sean MacKinnon, Dalhousie University

Instructor, PhD, Department of Psychology & Neuroscience

Kayla Joyce, University of Manitoba

Clinical Psychology Graduate Student, MSc, Department of Psychology

Sherry Stewart, Dalhousie University

Professor, PhD, Department of Psychology & Neuroscience

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Published

2021-06-11

Issue

Section

Original Report