| Literature DB >> 34735980 |
Lauren Micalizzi1, Alexander W Sokolovsky2, Daniel J Delaney3, Rachel L Gunn4, Lynn Hernandez5, Kathleen Kemp6, Anthony Spirito7, L A R Stein8.
Abstract
Cannabis refusal self-efficacy, defined as confidence in the ability to refuse cannabis or to avoid cannabis use, is associated with decreased cannabis use. Juvenile justice-involved youth are at high risk for cannabis use and may have lower refusal self-efficacy. While court-involved, non-incarcerated (CINI) and incarcerated youth are groups that are both at high-risk for cannabis use, the experience of incarceration may impact the measurement of refusal self-efficacy for cannabis. The factor structure, measurement invariance, and concurrent validity of the Brief Situational Confidence Questionnaire for Cannabis (BSCQ-M) was assessed among CINI (n = 148) and incarcerated (n = 199) youth (80.7% male, Mage = 16.3). Confirmatory factor analyses indicated that a correlated 3-factor model including positive/good times, negative internal, and negative external situational factors best fit the data. Multigroup measurement invariance testing revealed that the BSCQ-M demonstrated configural, metric, scalar, and residual invariance across CINI and incarcerated samples, indicating measurement invariance across the two groups. Negative binomial regressions revealed that BSCQ-M scores were significantly negatively associated with concurrent cannabis use. Results suggest that the BSCQ-M is a brief, psychometrically sound measure of refusal self-efficacy for cannabis among juvenile justice-involved youth that can be utilized with both CINI and incarcerated youth.Entities:
Keywords: Cannabis use; Juvenile justice; Measurement invariance; Psychometrics; Youth
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34735980 PMCID: PMC8662708 DOI: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2021.107154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Addict Behav ISSN: 0306-4603 Impact factor: 4.591