4.2 Article

Drinking Less on Cannabis Use Days: The Moderating Role of UPPS-P Impulsive Personality Traits

Journal

PSYCHOLOGY OF ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS
Volume 35, Issue 6, Pages 737-748

Publisher

EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING FOUNDATION-AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/adb0000727

Keywords

co-use; alcohol; cannabis; impulsivity; urgency

Funding

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse [R01 DA033425]
  2. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism [K08 AA027551]

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The study found that impulsivity plays an important moderating role in daily drinking among veterans, with individuals high in positive urgency and lack of perseverance drinking less on co-use days compared to alcohol-only days. The findings suggest a substitution/compensatory effect for these impulsivity traits, potentially influenced by frequent cannabis use in veterans.
Objective: Several studies suggest that alcohol and cannabis co-users are heavier drinkers and experience more alcohol-related consequences. However, day-level associations between co-use and drinking levels are mixed. One reason may be that individual characteristics moderate the daily impact of using alcohol alone or in conjunction with cannabis. The theory would suggest that highly impulsive individuals may drink more on co-use days, yet this assertion remains untested. Therefore, the current study tested whether impulsivity moderated the effect of co-use on same-day drinking quantity within veterans, a high-risk sample for substance use and impulsivity. Method: In a longitudinal observational study, co-using veterans (N = 139) completed three semi-annual assessments reporting on their daily drinking quantity and cannabis use via Timeline Followback (Observations = 19,245) and impulsivity via the UPPS-P. Mixed effect modeling was used to test hypotheses that co-use (compared to alcohol-only) days would be associated with heavier drinking for those high (but not low) in positive and negative urgency. Results: Significant interactions were found for positive urgency (PU) and lack of perseverance (LP), such that individuals at mean and low levels of PU and LP drank less on co-use (compared to alcohol-only) days. There were no significant interactions for other UPPS-P impulsivity facets. Conclusion: Findings are consistent with a substitution/compensatory effect for individuals at mean and low levels of both UPPS-P facets, and may be a byproduct of frequent cannabis use in veterans. In contrast, findings suggest that co-use and alcohol-only days may be characterized by similarly high levels of drinking for highly impulsive individuals.

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