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Máté Kapitány-fövény

Faculty of Health Sciences, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary.

1 paper in the library · 35 citations · publishing 2020

Papers

Why do people use new psychoactive substances? Development of a new measurement tool in six European countries.

Journal of psychopharmacology (Oxford, England) June 1, 2020 Annemieke Benschop, Róbert Urbán, Máté Kapitány-fövény et al. 35 citations

A new questionnaire, the New Psychoactive Substance Use Motives Measure (NPSMM), was developed and validated across six EU countries with 3,023 users from three subgroups: socially marginalized individuals, nightlife attendees, and online community members. Factor analysis revealed five consistent motives for using new psychoactive substances: coping, enhancement, social, conformity, and expansion. Motives varied by user group: marginalized users scored higher on coping and conformity, nightlife groups on social motives, and online community users on expansion motives. Different types of NPS were linked to different motives—expansion with psychedelics and enhancement with stimulants—while coping, social, and conformity motives were more tied to user groups. The NPSMM is a valid tool for measuring these motives.