| Literature DB >> 30673730 |
Elissa R Weitzman1,2, Parissa K Salimian3, Lily Rabinow3, Sharon Levy2,3.
Abstract
Increasing numbers of youth globally live with a chronic illness. These youth use alcohol and marijuana at levels equal to or greater than their healthy peers and, when using, are at elevated risk for regular or problem use and adverse consequences to their condition. Little is known about whether behavioral theories commonly invoked to explain adolescent substance use apply to this group, limiting our ability to develop, tailor and target preventive interventions. We interviewed youth ages 16-19 years in care for a chronic disease to gain knowledge of this group's perspectives on substance use risk, decision-making, and preferences for clinical guidance. Interviews were transcribed and thematically analyzed. Three principal themes emerged: first, having a chronic disease frames understanding of and commitment to health protecting behaviors and impacts decisions to avoid behaviors that carry risks for disease complications and flares; second, developmental impulses typical of adolescence can amplify an adolescent's propensity to take risks despite medical vulnerability and direct youth toward maladaptive choices to mitigate risk; and third, poor knowledge about effects of substance use on specific features of a disease shapes perceived risk and undermines health protecting decisions. Youth navigate these issues variously including by avoiding substance use at a specific time or entirely, using while cognitively discounting risks and/or adjusting treatment outside of medical advice. Their perceptions about substance use are complex and reveal tension among choices reflecting a chronic illness frame, developmental impulses, and knowledge gaps. Delivery of targeted guidance in healthcare settings may help youth navigate this complexity and connect patient-centered goals to optimize health with health protecting behavioral decisions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30673730 PMCID: PMC6343873 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0209963
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of participants.
| Characteristics | No. (%) |
|---|---|
| Total | 25 |
| Average age in years, (SD) | 18.0 (1.12) |
| Sex | |
| Male | 11 (44.0) |
| Female | 14 (56.0) |
| Race | |
| White | 19 (79.2) |
| Other | 5 (20.8) |
| Highest level of education of parent(s) living at home | |
| Graduated college or more | 16 (66.7) |
| Less than college | 8 (33.3) |
| Diagnosis | |
| Type 1 diabetes | 9 (36.0) |
| Juvenile idiopathic arthritis | 8 (32.0) |
| IBD-associated arthritis | 2 (8.0) |
| Other rheumatic disease | 1 (4.0) |
| IBD only | 4 (16.0) |
| Chronic persistent asthma | 1 (4.0) |
| Average age in years at diagnosis, (SD) | 8 (4.15) |
| Average number of subspecialty clinic visits in the past year, (SD) | 3.44 (1.76) |
Abbreviation: IBD, inflammatory bowel disease.
a Values are the number (percentage) unless indicated otherwise.
b Values may not equal total due to missing data.
Theme 1.
The chronic disease frame.
| Subtheme | Concept | Exemplary quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Impact of condition on daily life and identity | Condition as core feature of identity | …I’ve only really lived life with [T1D]…so I don’t really know what I’m missing. (18-year-old male with T1D) |
| Illness intrusiveness | …I've missed a lot of days of school in the past. Like, I've missed 60 days because of arthritis. It was a little hectic. (16-year-old male with JIA) | |
| Conceptualizing healthy as being symptom and complication free | Being healthy for [my friends] is just exercising and eating healthy. Whereas for me it’s having the full energy to do stuff and make sure there are no flares. (19-year-old female with IBD) | |
| Coming to terms with having disease | You just have to realize that things can get better but you have to take all the medications that are prescribed to you …I think I just realized like how severe the illness was. (19-year-old female with IBD-associated arthritis) | |
| Accelerated or interrupted maturity | [I’m] probably honestly more …mature [than my peers]. I think because I had to grow up at such a young age. And I find myself not finding the same things funny and not really into the whole partying…it’s almost like I just skipped a couple years. (19-year-old female with JIA) | |
| Health-conscious influences on substance use decisions | Consideration of consequences on chronic condition | …I always thought about how [drinking] would affect my Crohn’s. I’ve always heard about like alcohol can disturb the stomach lining. Therefore I was like, well, if my stomach’s already affected, why add poison to it? (19-year-old male with IBD) |
| Consideration of alcohol-medication interaction consequences | I know I can't really skip [my medication] because then my knees are going to hurt really bad. So I guess if I ever drink in the future, I'll just barely have any because I'm afraid that it's going to like cancel it out or something. (16-year-old female with JIA) | |
| Conditioning abstinence on perception of disease activity | If one day I’m planning on going out with my friends and my stomach hurts…I won’t drink…I always listen to my body. (19-year-old female with IBD) | |
| Valuing clear-headedness to accurately perceive feedback about disease activity and symptoms | It’s just all about feeling if you’re high or low. And you can lose that if you get too drunk. (18-year-old male with T1D) | |
| Using substances for symptom relief | [Marijuana] like |
Theme 2.
The adolescent stage.
| Subtheme | Concept | Exemplar quote |
|---|---|---|
| Developmental impulses | Appetite for novelty and experimentation | I did [have fun drinking with my friends]. It was more fun because it was like the introduction to it, not because of the people I was doing it with. I was trying something new, and it was sort of adventurous. (18-year-old female with JIA) |
| Reactance against perceived authority (psychological reactance) | …I was always told that I can’t [drink], so that made me want to do it more. (18-year-old female with JIA) | |
| Value for autonomous decision-making | It's possible that someone with [Rheumatoid Arthritis] isn't going to care as much about their body as I do and that's perfectly fine like, “you do you.” (18 year-old female with JIA) | |
| Social and contextual influences | Perceived friend group norms | I'd say starting at the beginning of junior year [of high school] basically like everyone drinks like, if you don't drink you really can't socialize. (18-year-old female with JIA) |
| Observational learning | …after my friend had passed away–she had diabetes and she did have complications that were directly from drinking, so like that was partially why I like chose to not drink. (19-year-old female with T1D) | |
| Availability of attractive alternatives | Well, I have plenty of fun without alcohol itself and I just like to enjoy the situation. Like if we are having a fire, I will make a nice s'more or at least roast some marshmallows for someone else. (17-year-old male with T1D) | |
| Balancing adolescent impulses and chronic disease concerns | Adjusting treatment regimen | I try really hard to take my methotrexate on the day that's like, the furthest from the day that I would be drinking. So like if I was drinking on a Saturday, I would try to take it on a Tuesday or Wednesday night. (18-year-old female with JIA) |
| Minimization of risk | …with all the technology now you really don't have to worry about [diabetes] that much [while drinking]. If you just have it in the back of your mind, then you're fine. I really just can live life normally. (18-year-old male with T1D) | |
| Substitution | …I have like tried pot instead [of drinking] and like even [my parents] were obviously not happy about that decision, but like understood that it wasn't like affecting my diabetes as much as like other decisions might have. (19-year-old female with T1D) |
Theme 3.
Disease-specific substance use knowledge.
| Subtheme | Concept | Exemplar quote |
|---|---|---|
| Information deficits | Questions and gaps in knowledge | I've always been told that [drinking] messes everything up but I don't know if [my blood sugar] goes high or low. (17-year-old male with T1D) |
| Obtaining information on one’s own | I read–before–my bottles of medicine. It's like, "Do not take with alcohol." And I just went online, [to check] if it's good to drink alcohol with medicine, and basically it just said like, "No, don't [drink] because [the medicine] won't work." (16-year-old female with polymyositis) | |
| Preferences for content and delivery of substance use messages | Factual and disease-specific | …[what] made an impression on me is probably the fact that the glucagon wouldn't work if I was severely intoxicated…I think that's the thing that I'd really say scared me the most because that's kind of a scary thought that like, you could die from drinking because your blood sugar was low and they had no way–and even in the hospital, they can give you IV's and stuff, but they really can't do much for you until the alcohol has been processed through your system. (18-year-old female with T1D) |
| From the specialist | …there is no other person in my life or anyone's life that has Crohn’s or any disease that knows more about, not only the disease, but my experience with the disease than my [GI] doctor. He is the utmost figure of knowledge, so I always want to hear what my doctor has to say. (19-year-old female with IBD) | |
| Direct and honest | …laying out all of the information [about drugs and alcohol] is probably the best thing to do…not trying to hold back any information because it might be scary. I think it's just best to say everything, even if it's unlikely to occur…it's best to be the most informed about any situation that could occur. (19-year-old female with IBD-associated arthritis) | |
| Perceived permission | [My endocrinologist] says, ‘Stay away from rum. Scotch and whiskey are okay.’ …I definitely try to follow that rule. (18-year-old male with T1D). | |
| Humanize the message | I feel like stories or like examples from your life or someone you know is kind of a good thing to tell people because then you know it’s real, like it actually happens. (16-year-old female with JIA) | |
| Sensitive to developmental context and social pressures | I know doctors usually aren't our age but I feel like it'd be much more helpful to try to get on the level that like teens are at…most doctors now don't really know what kind of peer pressure is out there and stuff like that so I feel like it'd be more helpful to be like, "Well, I know the situation you're in and I know that you're being pressured to do these things and whatnot but you really have to not do that." (19-year-old female with IBD-associated arthritis) | |
| Private and confidential | …the problem is, though, that especially in [specialty care for] pediatrics, most of the time the kid’s parent is in [the clinic room] …I wish that a doctor could ask a parent to step out for a minute or something and be like, "Is there anything else you want to talk to me about?" That way a kid can feel safe. (19-year-old female with IBD) |