Relationship Between Coffee Use and Depression and Anxiety in a Population of Adult Polysubstance Abusers : Journal of Addiction Medicine

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Original Research

Relationship Between Coffee Use and Depression and Anxiety in a Population of Adult Polysubstance Abusers

Yudko, Errol PhD,; McNiece, Shannon Irena MA

Author Information
Journal of Addiction Medicine 8(6):p 438-442, November/December 2014. | DOI: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000077

Abstract

Objectives: 

This study examined the relationship between mental health symptoms and the use of tobacco and caffeinated beverages during and just before a counseling session in a population of adult polysubstance abusers.

Methods: 

The participants were all polysubstance users in substance abuse treatment. The participants completed the Beck Depression Inventory II and the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory immediately after a treatment episode. They also reported whether or not they had drunk a caffeinated beverage or smoked a cigarette just before or during that treatment episode.

Results: 

Coffee drinkers scored significantly higher (mean = 20.3) on the Beck Depression Inventory II than did noncoffee drinkers (mean = 9.2). The differences between these groups on the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory were nonsignificant. There was no relationship between other caffeinated beverages or tobacco use and depression or anxiety.

Conclusions: 

Caffeine use is associated with depression in adult polysubstance abusers. Implications for using coffee drinking as a predictor of depression in substance abuse treatment settings are discussed.

© 2014 American Society of Addiction Medicine

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