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Health and Developmental Consequences of Youth Drug Abuse
Research Findings from May, 2001 Director's Report
This section lists selected summaries from NIDA funded research projects that investigate the developmental implications of drug use. The summaries provided were selected from recent issues of the Director's Report to the National Advisory Council on Drug Abuse. For a more comprehensive listing of NIDA funded projects see the Director's Report.
Predictors of Early High School Dropout
This study compared the adequacy of 5 theories for predicting dropping
out of high school before grade 10. These theories include full
mediation by academic achievement and direct effects related to general
deviance, deviant affiliations, family socialization, and structural
strains. Models were used to test these theories on prospective data
from an ethnically diverse urban sample. Poor academic achievement
mediated the effect of all independent factors, although general
deviance, bonding to antisocial peers, and socioeconomic status also
retained direct effects on dropping out. Therefore, none of the theories
were fully adequate to explain the data, although partial support was
obtained for each theory. Battin-Pearson, S., Newcomb, M.D., Abbott,
R.D., Hill, K.G., Catalano, R.F., and Hawkins, J. D. Predictors of Early
High School Dropout: A Test of Five Theories. J. Educational Psychology
92(3), pp. 568-582, 2000.
Male Adolescent Friendships and Aggression Toward Female Partners
Deviancy training was examined as a risk factor for physical and
psychological aggression toward a female partner among boys and young
men in the Oregon Youth Study. Hostile talk about women during
videotaped male friendship interactions was hypothesized to indicate a
process by which aggression toward women is reinforced within male peer
networks with both antisocial behavior and hostile talk being predicted
to be associated with later aggression toward a female partner.
Prospective developmental models were tested from 9-20 years of age
through young adulthood. Findings indicated that the relation of deviant
peer association in adolescence and later aggression toward a partner
was mediated by antisocial behavior; observed hostile talk about women
with male peers explained additional variance in aggression toward a
partner. Aggression Toward Female Partners by At-Risk Young Men: The
Contribution of Male Adolescent Friendships. Capaldi, D.M., Dishion,
T.J., Stoolmiller, M., and Yoerger, K. Dev. Psych., 37(1), pp. 61-73,
2000.
Methods to Decrease Attrition in Longitudinal Studies with Adolescents
This article presents a summary of methods to decrease attrition in
longitudinal school-based studies conducted with adolescents beginning
junior high schools or middle schools. These include collection of
contact information about students, additional days to collect data from
absentee students, data collection in new high schools once students
graduate from junior high schools or middle schools, sending
questionnaires by mail, and conducting telephone or home interviews.
Epstein, J.A. and Botvin, G.J. Methods to Decrease Attrition in
Longitudinal Studies with Adolescents. Psychological Reports, 87 (1),
pp. 139-140, 2000.
Role of Conduct Disorder in Neuropsychological Deficits in Female
Adolescents with Substance Use Disorder
CEDAR-affiliated researchers sought to determine whether
neuropsychological deficits in female adolescents are more closely
related to a diagnosis of a substance use disorder (SUD) or a conduct
disorder (CD). Subjects were 470 female adolescents between the ages of
14 and 18 years. They were categorized into one of four groups: (1)
SUD-only (n =63), (2) CD-only (n = 58), (3) SUD+CD (n = 239) and (4)
normal control (n = 110). The groups were compared on multiple
neuropsychological measures covering four cognitive domains: general
intelligence, executive functioning, language competence and academic
achievement. The findings were consistent across all measures.
Multivariate analyses of variance revealed significant group differences
for all four neuropsychological domains. Univariate tests indicated that
the two CD groups equally exhibited the poorest performance of all four
groups on nearly all measures of intelligence, executive functioning,
language competence and academic achievement. The SUD-only group
performed better than the two CD groups but not as well as the control
group. Socioeconomic status and chronological age were statistically
controlled for in all analyses. These findings suggest that the
neuropsychological deficits in this sample of female adolescents with
SUD are more closely related to CD, or antisociality in general, than to
SUD. Future studies assessing the neuropsychological functioning of
persons with SUD should make efforts to measure comorbid antisociality.
Giancola, P.R. and Mezzich, A.C. Neuropsychological Deficits in Female
Adolescents with a Substance Use Disorder: Better Accounted for by
Conduct Disorder? Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 61(6), pp. 809-817,
2000.
Childhood Depression and Adult Personality Disorder
This study extends previous findings of the risks posed by childhood
major depressive disorder and other psychopathological features for
later personality disorder (PD) in a random sample of 551 youths.
Self-reports and mother reports were used to evaluate DSM-III-R (Axes I
and II) psychiatric disorders at mean ages of 12.7, 15.2, and 21.1
years. Logistic regression was used to examine the independent effects
of major depressive disorder in childhood or adolescence on 10 PDs in
young adulthood. Results indicate that the odds of dependent,
antisocial, passive-aggressive, and histrionic PDs increased by more
than 13, 10, 7, and 3 times, respectively, given prior major depressive
disorder. Those effects were independent of age, sex, disadvantaged
socioeconomic status, a history of child maltreatment, nonintact family
status, parental conflict, preexisting PD in adolescence, and other
childhood or adolescent Axis I psychopathological features, including
disruptive and anxiety disorders. In addition, odds of schizoid and
narcissistic PD increased by almost 6 times and odds of antisocial PD
increased by almost 5 times given a prior disruptive disorder, and odds
of paranoid PD increased by 4 times given a prior anxiety disorder.
Personality disorders may represent alternative pathways of continuity
for major depressive disorder and other Axis I disorders across the
child-adult transition. Kasen, S., Cohen, P., Skodol, A.E., Johnson,
J.G., Smailes, E. and Brook, J.S. Childhood Depression and Adult
Personality Disorder: Alternative Pathways of Continuity. Arch. Gen.
Psychiatry, 58(3), pp. 231-236, 2001.
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