All Relations between belief and cannabis

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
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. for those who intended using marijuana, personal beliefs were significantly more salient than beliefs about what important others thought they should do. 2003-06-11 2023-08-12 Not clear
H Chabrol, E Massot, A Montovany, K Chouicha, J Armitag. [Patterns of use, cannabis beliefs and dependence: study of 159 adolescent users]. Archives de pediatrie : organe officiel de la Societe francaise de pediatrie. vol 9. issue 8. 2002-10-08. PMID:12205787. [patterns of use, cannabis beliefs and dependence: study of 159 adolescent users]. 2002-10-08 2023-08-12 Not clear
H Chabrol, E Massot, A Montovany, K Chouicha, J Armitag. [Patterns of use, cannabis beliefs and dependence: study of 159 adolescent users]. Archives de pediatrie : organe officiel de la Societe francaise de pediatrie. vol 9. issue 8. 2002-10-08. PMID:12205787. to evaluate the connections between the frequency and patterns of cannabis use and dependence, and the beliefs linked to cannabis use in a sample of adolescents. 2002-10-08 2023-08-12 Not clear
J Menares, E Thiriot, N Aguilera-Torre. Factors related to the potential risk of trying an illicit drug among high school students in Paris. European journal of epidemiology. vol 13. issue 7. 1998-01-13. PMID:9384268. three kinds of risk factors were identified: (a)licit drugs: alcoholic drunkenness and abstaining from tranquilizers if personal discomfort is present, (b) peer modeling: presence of a fellow using marijuana, and (c) risk notion: weak risk notion on hashish use and belief that hard and soft drug use are not related. 1998-01-13 2023-08-12 Not clear
J L Azorlosa, M K Greenwald, M L Stitze. Marijuana smoking: effects of varying puff volume and breathhold duration. The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics. vol 272. issue 2. 1995-03-15. PMID:7853169. these findings confirm the utility of the controlled smoking technology, support the notion that cumulative puff volume systematically influences biological exposure and subjective effects, but cast doubt on the common belief that prolonged breathholding of marijuana smoke enhances classical subjective effects associated with its reinforcing value in humans. 1995-03-15 2023-08-12 human
L J Francis, K Mulle. Religiosity and attitudes towards drug use among 13-15 year olds in England. Addiction (Abingdon, England). vol 88. issue 5. 1993-07-28. PMID:8518717. a sample of 4753 13-15 year olds attending the third and fourth year classes of 29 secondary schools completed a questionnaire concerned with attitudes towards the use of alcohol, butane gas, glue, heroin, marijuana and tobacco, together with indices of religious affiliation, belief and practice. 1993-07-28 2023-08-12 Not clear
P L Ellickson, R M Bell, E R Harriso. Changing adolescent propensities to use drugs: results from Project ALERT. Health education quarterly. vol 20. issue 2. 1993-06-17. PMID:8491635. results show that the curriculum successfully dampened cognitive risk factors from each of the above categories for both cigarettes and marijuana, indicating that social influence programs can mitigate a broad range of beliefs associated with the propensity to use drugs. 1993-06-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
F Beauvai. Attitudes about drugs and the drug use of Indian youth. American Indian and Alaska native mental health research : journal of the National Center. vol 5. issue 1. 1992-12-18. PMID:1420539. perceived harm is linked to use, and 8th-grade reservation youth show the lowest belief that drugs are harmful; only 51% believe that using marijuana regularly will lead to "a lot" of harm. 1992-12-18 2023-08-11 Not clear
S J Levy, J P Pierc. Predictors of marijuana use and uptake among teenagers in Sydney, Australia. The International journal of the addictions. vol 25. issue 10. 1991-06-04. PMID:2090622. the predictors of marijuana use were: male sex; heavier, more frequent alcohol use; use of drugs other than alcohol, tobacco, or marijuana; marijuana use by siblings, friends, and other acquaintances; attitudes and beliefs favoring drug use; the attitude that possession of marijuana should not be a criminal offense; and the attitude that marijuana is not an important drug issue. 1991-06-04 2023-08-11 Not clear
S J Levy, J P Pierc. Predictors of marijuana use and uptake among teenagers in Sydney, Australia. The International journal of the addictions. vol 25. issue 10. 1991-06-04. PMID:2090622. the predictors of uptake were: age; male sex; heavier, more frequent alcohol use; tobacco smoking; attitudes and beliefs favoring drugs use; and the attitude that marijuana smoking should be legal. 1991-06-04 2023-08-11 Not clear
J P Zacny, L D Chai. Breathhold duration and response to marijuana smoke. Pharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior. vol 33. issue 2. 1989-12-19. PMID:2554344. marijuana smokers are frequently observed to hold the smoke in their lungs for prolonged periods (10-15 sec) apparently in the belief that prolonged breathholding intensifies the effects of the drug. 1989-12-19 2023-08-11 human
P J Morningsta. Thandai and chilam: traditional Hindu beliefs about the proper uses of Cannabis. Journal of psychoactive drugs. vol 17. issue 3. 1985-12-09. PMID:3903086. thandai and chilam: traditional hindu beliefs about the proper uses of cannabis. 1985-12-09 2023-08-11 Not clear
P J Morningsta. Thandai and chilam: traditional Hindu beliefs about the proper uses of Cannabis. Journal of psychoactive drugs. vol 17. issue 3. 1985-12-09. PMID:3903086. hindu beliefs about appropriate use of cannabis illustrate the capacity of cultural systems to order and direct the course of complex phenomenal events. 1985-12-09 2023-08-11 Not clear
K H Beck, T G Summon. Police officer attitudes toward marijuana: a replication and confirmation. The American journal of drug and alcohol abuse. vol 10. issue 4. 1985-06-05. PMID:6335949. the survey dealt with three sets of beliefs: the effects of marijuana, the enforcement of marijuana laws, and the causes of marijuana use. 1985-06-05 2023-08-12 Not clear
W P Kory, L A Crandal. Nonmedical drug use patterns among medical students. The International journal of the addictions. vol 19. issue 8. 1985-04-26. PMID:6530307. the findings provide little support for the belief that marijuana or cocaine use substitutes for alcohol use; higher consumption of virtually any recreational drug is predictive of higher use of other recreational drugs. 1985-04-26 2023-08-12 Not clear
A Thero. [Physiological dangers of the use of Cannabis sativa]. South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde. vol 65. issue 11. 1984-04-17. PMID:6322360. the earlier belief that cannabis could be used effectively in the treatment of various illnesses contributes to the tendency of cannabis users to reject the possibility that it may be harmful to their health. 1984-04-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
L Lotecka, M MacWhinne. Enhancing decision behavior in high school "smokers". The International journal of the addictions. vol 18. issue 4. 1983-12-17. PMID:6629558. subjects receiving the cognitive-behavioral program revised their ideal level of marijuana consumption downward and differed on certain other beliefs compared to the popular tips group. 1983-12-17 2023-08-12 human
K H Beck, A L Kavelak, T G Summon. Police officer attitudes toward marijuana: a descriptive analysis. The American journal of drug and alcohol abuse. vol 9. issue 2. 1983-06-17. PMID:6985004. the attitudes of a major metropolitan police force were surveyed with regard to their beliefs about marijuana; especially, their beliefs about the effects of marijuana, the enforcement of laws for possession, and the causes for marijuana use. 1983-06-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
K H Beck, A L Kavelak, T G Summon. Police officer attitudes toward marijuana: a descriptive analysis. The American journal of drug and alcohol abuse. vol 9. issue 2. 1983-06-17. PMID:6985004. the officers' rank, educational level, and whether or not they had children were also significantly related to marijuana beliefs, suggesting important demographic factors which determine acceptance of current drug law changes. 1983-06-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
W O Bearden, A G Woodside, J J Jone. Beliefs and anticipated situations influencing intentions to use drugs. Perceptual and motor skills. vol 48. issue 3 Pt 1. 1979-11-21. PMID:482024. unique differences between usage segments in beliefs, perceptions, and anticipated situational influences regarding the salient dimensions underlying motivations to use marijuana are described. 1979-11-21 2023-08-11 Not clear