Synthetic THC Use Among University Students: An Exploration of Perceived Harm, Ease of Access, and Friends' Use

Authors

  • Rebecca A. Vidourek
  • Keith A. King
  • Michelle L. Burbage

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47779/ajhs.2014.207

Abstract

The present study examined perceived harm, ease of access, friends’ use, and extent of lifetime synthetic THC use among (N = 338) university students. Demographics, including sex and grade, also were investigated. Results indicated that students’ who perceived synthetic THC as harmful were less likely to use synthetic THC in their lifetime. Students’ reporting synthetic THC as easy to obtain were more likely to use synthetic THC. Findings indicated that students’ lifetime use was impacted by friends’ use. Although more men and upper classmen reported using synthetic THC, no significant differences for use among sex or grade levels were found.  These findings should be considered when developing synthetic THC prevention and intervention programs for university students.

Author Biographies

Rebecca A. Vidourek

Rebecca A. Vidourek, PhD, CHES Assistant Professor Health Promotion and
Education Program, University of Cincinnati, PO Box 210068, ML 0068, 526 TC, Cincinnati, OH 45221-0068, Phone 513-556-3857

Keith A. King

Keith A. King, PhD, MCHES Professor and Program Director Health Promotion & Education University of Cincinnati PO Box 210068, ML 0068, 526TC Cincinnati, OH 45221

Michelle L. Burbage

Michelle L. Burbage, B.A Graduate Assistant Health Promotion & Education University of Cincinnati PO Box 210068, ML 0068, 526TC Cincinnati, OH 45221

Published

2020-11-15

How to Cite

Vidourek, R., King, K., & Burbage, M. (2020). Synthetic THC Use Among University Students: An Exploration of Perceived Harm, Ease of Access, and Friends’ Use. American Journal of Health Studies, 29(1). https://doi.org/10.47779/ajhs.2014.207