Sexism and Cannabis-Related Problems Among Women in the U.S.: The Role of Negative Affect and Coping-Motivated Cannabis Use
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2025
Abstract
Background: Although previous studies have highlighted the detrimental impact of sexism on other substance use and use-related outcomes among women, limited empirical attention has tested whether sexism is related to worse cannabis-related outcomes. It may be that women use cannabis to cope with negative affect related to experiencing sexism, and thus continue to use despite cannabis-related problems. However, no known studies have tested this hypothesis. Objectives: We tested whether experiencing sexism was related to more cannabis use-related problems via the serial effects of negative affect (anxiety, depression) and coping-motivated cannabis use among 304 women who endorsed current (past three-month) cannabis use. Results: Sexism was significantly positively related to coping-motivated-cannabis use and use-related problems. Sexism was indirectly related to cannabis problems via the serial effects of anxiety and coping motives and via the serial effects of depression and coping motives, but not via the indirect effects of anxiety, depression, or coping motives alone. Conclusions: Findings suggest that women may use cannabis to cope with sexism-related negative affect, and thus continue to use despite experiencing greater cannabis problems. These results may have important clinical implications and emphasize the need for greater gender-responsive approaches in prevention and intervention efforts for women who use cannabis.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Substance Use and Misuse
First Page
168
Last Page
175
Recommended Citation
Morris, P., Thomas, K., & Buckner, J. (2025). Sexism and Cannabis-Related Problems Among Women in the U.S.: The Role of Negative Affect and Coping-Motivated Cannabis Use. Substance Use and Misuse, 60 (2), 168-175. https://doi.org/10.1080/10826084.2024.2422944