All Relations between attitudes and cannabis

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Leickness C Simbayi, Seth C Kalichman, Sean Jooste, Charsey Cherry, Sakhumzi Mfecane, Demetria Cai. Risk factors for HIV-AIDS among youth in Cape Town, South Africa. AIDS and behavior. vol 9. issue 1. 2005-06-24. PMID:15812613. for young men, hiv risk factors were associated with fewer years of education, lower levels of aids-related knowledge, condom attitudes, and dagga (marijuana) use. 2005-06-24 2023-08-12 Not clear
P Terry, K A Wrigh. Self-reported driving behaviour and attitudes towards driving under the influence of cannabis among three different user groups in England. Addictive behaviors. vol 30. issue 3. 2005-06-13. PMID:15718082. self-reported driving behaviour and attitudes towards driving under the influence of cannabis among three different user groups in england. 2005-06-13 2023-08-12 human
P Terry, K A Wrigh. Self-reported driving behaviour and attitudes towards driving under the influence of cannabis among three different user groups in England. Addictive behaviors. vol 30. issue 3. 2005-06-13. PMID:15718082. the study characterized self-reported driving behaviour, attitudes towards driving and assumptions about the effects of cannabis on driving, among two different volunteer groups: 63 regular cannabis users (rcus; cannabis use>monthly) and 46 undergraduate student users, all from the west midlands. 2005-06-13 2023-08-12 human
Okan Cem Cirakoğlu, Güler Işi. Perception of drug addiction among Turkish university students: causes, cures, and attitudes. Addictive behaviors. vol 30. issue 1. 2005-03-29. PMID:15561444. the most negative attitudes were found toward "heroin" vignette and the most positive attitudes were found toward the "cannabis" vignette. 2005-03-29 2023-08-12 Not clear
Steve Sussman, Clyde W Den. Five-year prospective prediction of marijuana use cessation of youth at continuation high schools. Addictive behaviors. vol 29. issue 6. 2004-11-04. PMID:15236829. social, attitude, intrapersonal, violence-related, drug use, and demographic baseline measures served as predictors of whether or not 339 teenage marijuana users reported having quit use 5 years later. 2004-11-04 2023-08-12 Not clear
Stelios Styliano. The role of religiosity in the opposition to drug use. International journal of offender therapy and comparative criminology. vol 48. issue 4. 2004-09-10. PMID:15245655. using an electronic mail survey of university students, data were obtained about the participants' religious beliefs, their perceptions of drug use, and their attitudes toward the use of six common drugs (alcohol, cigarettes, cocaine, heroin, lsd, and marijuana). 2004-09-10 2023-08-12 human
C A Olsson, C Coffey, J W Toumbourou, L Bond, L Thomas, G Patto. Family risk factors for cannabis use: a population-based survey of Australian secondary school students. Drug and alcohol review. vol 22. issue 2. 2003-09-17. PMID:12850900. the objective of this study was to investigate relationships between adolescent cannabis use and indices of parent - child attachment, family functioning and parent attitudes to drugs and delinquency. 2003-09-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
C A Olsson, C Coffey, J W Toumbourou, L Bond, L Thomas, G Patto. Family risk factors for cannabis use: a population-based survey of Australian secondary school students. Drug and alcohol review. vol 22. issue 2. 2003-09-17. PMID:12850900. multivariate logistic regression was used to identify independent associations between cannabis use and parent - child attachment, family functioning and parent attitudes to drugs and delinquency. 2003-09-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
C A Olsson, C Coffey, J W Toumbourou, L Bond, L Thomas, G Patto. Family risk factors for cannabis use: a population-based survey of Australian secondary school students. Drug and alcohol review. vol 22. issue 2. 2003-09-17. PMID:12850900. cannabis use in year 9 was associated with permissive parent attitudes to drugs and delinquency (any use: adjusted odds ratio (or) = 8.1; weekly use: adjusted or = 7.6), and was particularly sensitive to small changes in the quality of the parent - child relationship with risk increasing threefold for those describing their attachment as 'good' compared with 'very good' (any use: adjusted or = 2.8, weekly use adjusted or = 2.9). 2003-09-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
Marco C Yzer, Joseph N Cappella, Martin Fishbein, Robert Hornik, R Kirkland Aher. The effectiveness of gateway communications in anti-marijuana campaigns. Journal of health communication. vol 8. issue 2. 2003-07-09. PMID:12746037. successful anti-marijuana messages can be hypothesized to have two types of effects, namely persuasion effects, that is, a change in people's beliefs about using marijuana, and priming effects, that is, a strengthened correlation between beliefs and associated variables such as attitude and intention. 2003-07-09 2023-08-12 Not clear
Frances V O'Callaghan, Terry Hanno. Normalization of marijuana use: its effects on adolescents' intentions to use marijuana. Substance use & misuse. vol 38. issue 2. 2003-06-11. PMID:12625427. there were no differences between two of the groups in relation to their attitudes towards marijuana, and no differences in perceived access to the drug. 2003-06-11 2023-08-12 Not clear
A Ghanizade. Shiraz University students' attitude towards drugs: an exploratory study. Eastern Mediterranean health journal = La revue de sante de la Mediterranee orientale = al-Majallah al-sihhiyah li-sharq al-mutawassit. vol 7. issue 3. 2003-05-02. PMID:12690766. using a self-reported questionnaire, 213 shiraz university students were surveyed about their attitudes towards drug use (cigarettes, alcohol, opium, heroin, cannabis) and their use of drugs (ever or during the 6 months prior to the study). 2003-05-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jessy Dévieux, Robert Malow, Judith A Stein, Terri E Jennings, Barbara A Lucenko, Cara Averhart, Seth Kalichma. Impulsivity and HIV risk among adjudicated alcohol- and other drug-abusing adolescent offenders. AIDS education and prevention : official publication of the International Society for AIDS Education. vol 14. issue 5 Suppl B. 2003-02-06. PMID:12413190. findings showed that compared to the less impulsive group, the highly impulsive adolescents reported more frequent marijuana and alcohol use in the last 3 months as well as a significantly higher proportion of unprotected sex when high on alcohol and marijuana, higher perceived susceptibility to hiv, more aids-related anxiety, greater hiv knowledge, less sexual self-efficacy, and less favorable sexual attitudes. 2003-02-06 2023-08-12 Not clear
Marc A Zimmerman, Jeffrey B Bingenheimer, Paul C Notar. Natural mentors and adolescent resiliency: a study with urban youth. American journal of community psychology. vol 30. issue 2. 2002-09-17. PMID:12002244. those with natural mentors were less likely to smoke marijuana or be involved in nonviolent delinquency, and had more positive attitudes toward school. 2002-09-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
Michael T Stephenson, Susan E Morgan, Elizabeth Pugzles Lorch, Philip Palmgreen, Lewis Donohew, Rick H Hoyl. Predictors of exposure from an antimarijuana media campaign: outcome research assessing sensation seeking targeting. Health communication. vol 14. issue 1. 2002-03-21. PMID:11853208. in addition, viewers reporting greater exposure were younger adolescents who indicated that they had poor family relations, promarijuana attitudes, and friends and family who used marijuana. 2002-03-21 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Lynskey, W Hal. The effects of adolescent cannabis use on educational attainment: a review. Addiction (Abingdon, England). vol 95. issue 11. 2001-03-01. PMID:11219366. cross-sectional studies have revealed significant associations between cannabis use and a range of measures of educational performance including lower grade point average, less satisfaction with school, negative attitudes to school, increased rates of school absenteeism and poor school performance. 2001-03-01 2023-08-12 Not clear
J Simons, K B Care. Attitudes toward marijuana use and drug-free experience: relationships with behavior. Addictive behaviors. vol 25. issue 3. 2000-11-29. PMID:10890287. two studies examined the moderating effect of attitude toward drug-free experience on relationships between attitudes toward marijuana and drug use. 2000-11-29 2023-08-12 human
J Simons, K B Care. Attitudes toward marijuana use and drug-free experience: relationships with behavior. Addictive behaviors. vol 25. issue 3. 2000-11-29. PMID:10890287. participants with positive attitudes toward marijuana use and relatively low attitudes toward drug-free experience used marijuana at the highest rates. 2000-11-29 2023-08-12 human
J Simons, K B Care. Attitudes toward marijuana use and drug-free experience: relationships with behavior. Addictive behaviors. vol 25. issue 3. 2000-11-29. PMID:10890287. among the 47 participants who had used marijuana more than 100 times in their lifetime, attitude toward drug-free experience moderated the relationship between attitude toward marijuana and marijuana-related problems. 2000-11-29 2023-08-12 human
S Wolfso. Students' estimates of the prevalence of drug use: evidence for a false consensus effect. Psychology of addictive behaviors : journal of the Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors. vol 14. issue 3. 2000-10-19. PMID:10998955. false consensus, or the tendency to overestimate the extent to which others share one's own attitudes and behaviors, was investigated in a study of 348 university students classified as non-drug users, cannabis-only users, or amphetamine + cannabis users. 2000-10-19 2023-08-12 human