Abstract

Cannabis use is prevalent with trauma survivors. Yet, the effects of cannabis use on posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) have been equivocal with some studies showing a positive association and some showing a negative association. Integrating the self-medication hypothesis and social cognitive theory (SCT), the present study aimed to elucidate differential outcomes by considering frequency of cannabis use and self-efficacy to control cannabis use in different contexts (i.e., social facilitation, opportunistic, and emotional relief) in relation to PTSS. Undergraduate students (N = 314) who endorsed lifetime trauma exposure and past-month cannabis use completed self-report measures assessing cannabis use behaviors, self-efficacy to control use, and PTSS. Parallel mediation revealed that initially, greater frequency of cannabis use was associated with PTSS severity (β = .16, SE = .09, p = .004). With the inclusion of emotional relief self-efficacy, opportunistic self-efficacy, and social facilitation self-efficacy to control cannabis use as parallel mediators, frequency of cannabis use no longer predicted PTSS severity. There was also a significant indirect effect of emotional relief self-efficacy to control cannabis use on frequency of use and PTSS (95% CI [.14, .31]). Self-efficacy to control cannabis use during moments of emotional distress could serve a critical role in the relationship between cannabis use and PTSS. These results may inform clinical intervention and provide survivors with a better understanding of how use impacts recovery. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

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