All Relations between cannabis and social relationships

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Michael T Compton, Victoria H Chien, Annie M Bollin. Associations between past alcohol, cannabis, and cocaine use and current schizotypy among first-degree relatives of patients with schizophrenia and non-psychiatric controls. The Psychiatric quarterly. vol 80. issue 3. 2009-11-04. PMID:19396546. participants who had ever used cannabis had significantly higher cognitive-perceptual, interpersonal, and total schizotypy scores compared to those who had not. 2009-11-04 2023-08-12 human
Michael T Compton, Victoria H Chien, Annie M Bollin. Associations between past alcohol, cannabis, and cocaine use and current schizotypy among first-degree relatives of patients with schizophrenia and non-psychiatric controls. The Psychiatric quarterly. vol 80. issue 3. 2009-11-04. PMID:19396546. younger age of alcohol use onset was associated with more schizotypy in adulthood, and younger age of first cannabis use was related to more interpersonal schizotypy. 2009-11-04 2023-08-12 human
Henri Chabrol, Carine Saint-Marti. Psychopathic traits and suicidal ideation in high-school students. Archives of suicide research : official journal of the International Academy for Suicide Research. vol 13. issue 1. 2009-04-21. PMID:19123110. a sample of 312 high-school students completed questionnaires assessing suicidal ideation, depressive symptoms, borderline personality traits, and cannabis use and the youth psychopathic traits inventory (ypi, andershed, kerr, stattin et al., 2002), which consists of three dimensions, the interpersonal subscale (grandiosity, manipulation), the affective subscale (callousness, unemotionality), and the behavioral subscale (impulsiveness, irresponsibility). 2009-04-21 2023-08-12 Not clear
Kathleen M Carrol. Recent advances in the psychotherapy of addictive disorders. Current psychiatry reports. vol 7. issue 5. 2006-01-10. PMID:16216150. this review summarizes the roles of behavioral therapies as contrasted with those of pharmacotherapies for substance use disorders and then provides an overview of the major classes of behavioral therapies (clinical management, coping skills approaches, motivational interviewing, and family and interpersonal approaches), highlighting their effectiveness across cocaine, opioid, alcohol, and cannabis use disorders. 2006-01-10 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jason Schiffman, Brad Nakamura, Mitchell Earleywine, Joseph LaBri. Symptoms of schizotypy precede cannabis use. Psychiatry research. vol 134. issue 1. 2005-09-09. PMID:15808288. findings suggest that regular cannabis users are significantly more prone to cognitive and perceptual distortions as well as disorganization, but not interpersonal deficits, than non-regular users and those who have never used. 2005-09-09 2023-08-12 Not clear
Lyndal Bond, Lyndal Thomas, Carolyn Coffey, Sara Glover, Helen Butler, John B Carlin, George Patto. Long-term impact of the Gatehouse Project on cannabis use of 16-year-olds in Australia. The Journal of school health. vol 74. issue 1. 2004-04-06. PMID:15022372. this study examined the impact of a school-based preventive intervention on cannabis use in adolescence, using a cluster-randomized trial of a multilevel intervention aimed at improving social relationships within schools by promoting change in school environment. 2004-04-06 2023-08-12 Not clear
Richard H Schwart. Marijuana: a decade and a half later, still a crude drug with underappreciated toxicity. Pediatrics. vol 109. issue 2. 2002-03-12. PMID:11826208. in the introduction to that article, i disclosed that our son keith, who was 15 years old at the time, was in a long-term, modified outpatient adolescent drug and alcohol rehabilitation program because he had become dependent on marijuana with its associated behavioral, interpersonal, scholastic, and antisocial problems. 2002-03-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
W W Latimer, K C Winters, R Stinchfield, R E Trave. Demographic, individual, and interpersonal predictors of adolescent alcohol and marijuana use following treatment. Psychology of addictive behaviors : journal of the Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors. vol 14. issue 2. 2000-07-18. PMID:10860115. a vulnerability model of adolescent substance abuse treatment outcome provided the basis for selection of demographic, individual, interpersonal, and treatment factors to predict the follow-up use of alcohol and marijuana in a sample of adolescents (n = 225) with psychoactive substance use disorders. 2000-07-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
A McDonald, N D Duncan, D I Mitchel. Alcohol, cannabis and cocaine usage in patients with trauma injuries. The West Indian medical journal. vol 48. issue 4. 2000-02-01. PMID:10639839. fifty per cent (50%) and fifty-five per cent (55%) of victims of road accidents and interpersonal violence, respectively, were positive for cannabis compared with 43% and 27% for alcohol, respectively. 2000-02-01 2023-08-12 Not clear
R L Donohew, R H Hoyle, R R Clayton, W F Skinner, S E Colon, R E Ric. Sensation seeking and drug use by adolescents and their friends: models for marijuana and alcohol. Journal of studies on alcohol. vol 60. issue 5. 1999-10-26. PMID:10487731. to investigate the prospective influence of individual adolescents' sensation seeking tendency and the sensation seeking tendency of named peers on the use of alcohol and marijuana, controlling for a variety of interpersonal and attitudinal risk and protective factors. 1999-10-26 2023-08-12 Not clear
J W Smith, P J Frawle. Treatment outcome of 600 chemically dependent patients treated in a multimodal inpatient program including aversion therapy and pentothal interviews. Journal of substance abuse treatment. vol 10. issue 4. 1993-11-17. PMID:8105103. however, interpersonal determinants were far more important in the cocaine and marijuana treated patients. 1993-11-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
S B Whitney, J N Cont. Adolescent drug abuse: problem and prospectus. Medicine and law. vol 9. issue 3. 1990-12-18. PMID:2122165. data of the prevalence and problems of abuse obtained by a survey of high school students indicate a high prevalence of alcohol and marijuana used combinationally and heavy users are likely to experience psychopathological consequences, including personal problems of identity diffusion, self-esteem, a motivational syndrome, and acute brain syndrome, interpersonal problems with peers and parents and problems with school participation and the law: adolescents who abuse alcohol and marijuana in combination at the same time are likely to have severe, chronic, and progressive psychopathological problems. 1990-12-18 2023-08-11 Not clear
J J Rachlinski, R W Foltin, M W Fischma. The effects of smoked Marijuana on interpersonal distances in small groups. Drug and alcohol dependence. vol 24. issue 3. 1990-02-22. PMID:2605993. the effects of smoked marijuana on interpersonal distances in small groups. 1990-02-22 2023-08-11 human
L D Gilchrist, S P Schinke, J E Trimble, G T Cvetkovic. Skills enhancement to prevent substance abuse among American Indian adolescents. The International journal of the addictions. vol 22. issue 9. 1987-12-22. PMID:3679639. at 6-month follow-up, compared with test-only control condition subjects, intervention condition subjects had better knowledge of drug effects, better interpersonal skills for managing pressures to use drugs, and lower rates of alcohol, marijuana, and inhalant use. 1987-12-22 2023-08-11 human
D B Kande. On processes of peer influences in adolescent drug use: a developmental perspective. Advances in alcohol & substance abuse. vol 4. issue 3-4. 1985-08-05. PMID:3874527. interpersonal influences of peers on ongoing marijuana and alcohol use result from modeling and imitation more than from social reinforcement and the transmission of values. 1985-08-05 2023-08-11 Not clear
G J Botvin, E Baker, N L Renick, A D Filazzola, E M Botvi. A cognitive-behavioral approach to substance abuse prevention. Addictive behaviors. vol 9. issue 2. 1984-08-07. PMID:6611026. the prevention strategy attempted to reduce intrapersonal pressure to smoke, drink excessively, or use marijuana by fostering the development of general life skills as well as teaching students tactics for resisting direct interpersonal pressure to use these substances. 1984-08-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
G R Staat. Sexual differentiation among marijuana users: reality or inaccuracy. The International journal of the addictions. vol 14. issue 8. 1980-05-14. PMID:536062. this study, based on data (n = 134) obtained by self-administered questionnaires, examines the extent marijuana users can be sexually differentiated regarding usage patterns, acquisition, distribution, effects on social relationships, and other activities. 1980-05-14 2023-08-11 Not clear
D S Janowsky, P L Clopton, P P Leichner, A A Abrams, L L Judd, R Pechnic. Interpersonal effects of marijuana. A model for the study of interpersonal psychopharmacology. Archives of general psychiatry. vol 36. issue 7. 1979-08-29. PMID:454094. interpersonal effects of marijuana. 1979-08-29 2023-08-11 human
D S Janowsky, P L Clopton, P P Leichner, A A Abrams, L L Judd, R Pechnic. Interpersonal effects of marijuana. A model for the study of interpersonal psychopharmacology. Archives of general psychiatry. vol 36. issue 7. 1979-08-29. PMID:454094. the effect of marijuana on affective changes and interpersonal skills, including empathy, acceptance, warmth, and genuineness, was studied in 20 dyadic relationships in which the experimental subject smoking marijuana containing 6 mg of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol and a placebo in separate trials. 1979-08-29 2023-08-11 human
D S Janowsky, P L Clopton, P P Leichner, A A Abrams, L L Judd, R Pechnic. Interpersonal effects of marijuana. A model for the study of interpersonal psychopharmacology. Archives of general psychiatry. vol 36. issue 7. 1979-08-29. PMID:454094. marijuana caused a relative decrease in the ratings of the interpersonal skills of the experimental subjects and decreased affective resonance between the experimental subjects and their partners. 1979-08-29 2023-08-11 human