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Origins and Pathways to Drug Abuse
Research Findings from May, 1999 Director's Report
This section lists selected summaries from NIDA funded research projects that investigate the origins and pathways to drug abuse. 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.
Antisocial Tendency Among Drug-Addicted Adults: Potential Long-Term
Effects of Parental Absence, Support, and Conflict During Childhood
This study examined the relationship between perceptions of
parent-child relations in the family of origin and antisocial tendency
in a sample of drug-addicted adults. Data included retrospective
accounts of childhood family factors, adolescent antisocial tendency and
self-reported hostility and risk-taking prior to treatment entry. A
developmental model was tested that included adolescent antisocial
tendency as a mediator of the relationship between childhood parenting
factors and adulthood antisocial tendency. The effects of parental
support and conflict were found to operate primarily through adolescent
measures of antisocial tendency. Specifically, lower levels of parental
support and higher levels of conflict with parents predicted greater
adolescent antisocial tendency, which in turn predicted more hostility
and risk-taking in adulthood. Thus, parental support appears to serve as
a buffer against deviant behavior and drug use. Knight, D.K., Broome,
K.M., Cross, D.R., Simpson, D.D., American Journal of Drug and Alcohol
Abuse, 24(3), pp. 361-375, 1998.
A Longitudinal Study of Children of Alcoholics: Predicting Young
Adult Substance Use Disorders, Anxiety, and Depression
Investigators at Arizona State University tested the magnitude and
specificity of parental alcoholism effects on young adult alcohol and
drug abuse/dependence, and also tested whether adolescent symptomatology
and adolescent substance use mediated the effects of parental alcoholism
on these diagnoses. Participants were from an ongoing longitudinal study
in which a target child was assessed in adolescence using
computer-assisted interviews with both parents and the child, (N=454
families, mean age at Time 1=12.7). In young adulthood, the original
target children and their full-biological siblings were assessed (mean
age=21) again using computer-assisted interviewing (N=732 young adults).
Results showed unique effects of parent alcoholism on young adult
substance abuse and dependence, over and above the effects of other
parental psychopathology, suggesting that parent alcoholism is a
specific risk factor for substance abuse/dependence above and beyond the
general elevation in risk that might be associated with having a
dysfunctional parent. Adolescent externalizing symptoms were found to be
significant mediators of these effects, suggesting that children of
alcoholics are at elevated risk for substance use disorders, in part,
because of their broader pattern of early adolescent antisociality and
conduct problems. Drug and alcohol diagnoses were mediated somewhat
differently. For drug abuse/dependence diagnoses, adolescent conduct
problems completely explained the significant parent alcoholism effect,
although an effect of parental antisociality remained. However, for
alcohol abuse/dependence diagnoses, the effects of parental alcoholism
could not be completely explained by adolescent conduct problems. Thus,
greater vulnerability to the psychopharmacological properties of alcohol
may account for additional risk for alcoholism among children of
alcoholics, whereas parental antisociality is more important to drug
abuse/dependence because drug use necessarily involves illegal
behaviors. Chassin, L., Pitts, S.C., DeLucia, C., and Todd, M. Journal
of Abnormal Psychology, 108, pp. 106-119, 1999.
Stress-Coping Factors in Adolescent Substance Use: Test of Ethnic
and Gender Differences in Samples of Urban Adolescents
Addressing the question of whether and how the etiology of drug use
differs for adolescents in various ethnic groups, researchers
investigated group differences in the relationship between stress-coping
variables and substance use with samples of inner-city students in
6th-8th grades (N = 1,289) and metropolitan-area students in 7th-9th
grades (N = 1,702). Use of cigarettes, alcohol, and marijuana were
considered, and measures of psychosocial predictor domains focused on
affect, life events, parental support, and coping patterns.
African-American adolescents had the lowest rate of substance use,
Hispanics were intermediate, and Whites had the highest rate; there was
no gender difference in overall substance use. Multiple regression
analysis showed that the strength of predictive relationships for
stress-coping variables was lower for African Americans and was greatest
for Whites; methodological tests showed that these differences were not
attributable to statistical artifacts. Hispanic adolescents showed
greater vulnerability than did Whites at younger ages but this effect
was reversed at later ages. Implications of the study include the
importance of incorporating stress-coping components in the design of
prevention programs for all ethnic groups. As affective factors were
less predictive of substance use among African-American adolescents,
programs should give greater attention to other domains when targeting
programs to these adolescents. Earlier prevention efforts (before age
12) are likely to be most critical for Hispanic youth. Vaccaro, D. and
Wills, T.A. Journal of Drug Education. Vol. 28(3), pp. 257-280,
1998.
Illicit Substance Use Among Adolescents: A Matrix of Prospective
Predictors
A research team led by Dr. John Petraitis reviewed findings from 58
prospective studies of illicit substance use (ISU) among adolescents. In
addition to including only longitudinal studies, the review considered
both significant and nonsignificant findings, focused on relationships
for which cross-study validation was possible, and attempted to cover
the full range of predictors. Traditional review techniques were used
rather than meta-analysis because of the number and range of predictors.
The review identified 384 findings and classified them according to
three types of influence (social, attitudinal, and intrapersonal) and
four levels of influence (ultimate, distal, proximal, and immediate).
The bulk of evidence reconfirmed the importance of several predictors of
ISU (e.g., intentions and prior substance-related behavior, friendship
patterns and peer behaviors, absence of supportive parents,
psychological temperament), revealed that a few variables thought to be
well-established predictors may not be (e.g., parental behaviors,
parental permissiveness, depression, low self-esteem), and uncovered
several variables where findings were either sparse or inconsistent
(e.g., the role of public policies concerning ISU, mass media depictions
of ISU, certain parenting styles, affective states, perceptions of
parental disapproval for ISU, and substance-specific refusal skills).
Among the well-established findings: (1) ISU rarely is the first problem
occurring among adolescents but more often follows other problem
behaviors; (2) adolescents usually are prepared cognitively for ISU,
usually believing that potential benefits exceed potential costs, etc;
(3) ISU usually occurs after exposure to other substance users; (4) ISU
is closely related to deviant peer bonding and, to a lesser extent, to
detachment from and rebellion against religion, school, and family; (5)
ISU occurs more frequently among adolescents who do not control their
emotion, when they are extraverted and socially disinhibited, and when
they are aggressive around other people --not among those who are
anxious, depressed, or low in self-esteem; and (6) though parental
permissiveness seems to have little effect on ISU, absence of parental
emotional support or absence of an intact family may lay the foundations
for ISU. Petraitis, J., Flay, B.R., Miller, T.Q., Torpy, E.J., Greiner,
B. Substance Use & Misuse. 33(13), pp. 2561-2604, Nov 1998.
Familial Backgrounds and Risk Behaviors of Youth with Thrownaway
Experiences
Some homeless youth have been characterized as "thrownaway" in that
they have specifically been told to leave home. In this study conducted
by Research Triangle Institute, thrownaway experiences among homeless
youth are examined in two national samples: a nationally representative
sample of youth residing in youth shelters, and a purposive sample of
street youth in 10 cities. Prevalence of thrownaway experiences for the
total samples and for demographic subgroups is provided along with
comparisons of the familial backgrounds and high-risk behaviors of youth
with and without such experiences. Youth with thrownaway experiences
constituted nearly half of each sample. In both samples, these youth
were more likely than youth without such experiences to report: (1) that
they had attempted suicide, used marijuana and other drugs (excluding
cocaine), and had been involved in the drug trade and carried hidden
weapons; (2) that other family members had used illicit drugs during the
30 days before the youth left home; and (3) that they had spent at least
1 night away from home due to physical and/or emotional abuse or
neglect, familial conflict, and familial substance use. Results indicate
that thrownaway youth constitute a particularly vulnerable subpopulation
of homeless youth and suggest that a greater recognition and
understanding of such youth will facilitate design of services that
better address their needs. Ringwalt, C., Greene, J., Robertson, M.
Journal of Adolescence. 21(3) 241-252, 1998.
Eight-fold Increased Risk of Drug Disorders among Relatives of
Probands with Drug Disorders
Merikangas and her colleagues at Yale Genetics Research Unit
performed a controlled family study of probands (N=231 probands; N=61
control probands; and N=1267 adult first-degree relatives) with several
different predominant drugs of abuse, including opioids, cocaine,
cannabis, and/or alcohol. Diagnostic estimates were based on
semistructured diagnostic interviews and/or structured family history
interviews regarding each proband, spouse, and adult first-degree
relative. Interview data were reviewed blindly and independently by
clinicians with extensive experience in the evaluation and treatment of
substance use disorders. There was an 8-fold increased risk of drug
disorders among the relatives of probands with drug disorders across a
wide range of specific substances, including opioids, cocaine, cannabis,
and alcohol, which is largely independent from the familial aggregation
of both alcoholism and antisocial personality disorder. There was also
evidence of specificity of familial aggregation of the predominant drug
of abuse. Elevation in risk of this magnitude places a family history of
drug disorder as one of the most potent risk factors for the development
of drug disorders. Results suggest that there may be risk factors that
are specific to particular classes of drugs as well as risk factors that
underlie substance disorders in general. Merikangas, K.R., Stolar, M.,
Stevens, D.E., Goulet, J., Presisig, M.A., Fenton, B., Zhang, H.,
O'Malley, S.S., Rounsaville, B.J. Familial Transmission of Substance Use
Disorders. Archives of General Psychiatry, 55, pp. 973-979, 1998.
Young Adult Drug Use May Be Reduced by Early Interventions, Stronger
Parent-Child Bonds
This study examined young adult drug use stemming from childhood
aggression, the parent-child mutual attachment relationship, and the
effect of unconventionality. Youngsters and their mothers were
interviewed when the youngsters were early adolescents, late
adolescents, and young adults. Additional data were collected from the
mothers when their youngsters were children. The analysis was conducted
on youngsters who had complete data at all 4 points in time. The
findings were in accord with the family interactional model; that is,
the parent-child mutual attachment relationship affects
unconventionality in the youngster, which, in turn, affects young adult
drug use. The results indicate that the parent-child mutual attachment
relationship does so through the stability of : (a) the attachment
relationship from childhood to young adulthood, (b) unconventional
personality and behavioral attributes from early adolescence to young
adulthood, and (c) drug use from early adolescence to young adulthood.
The findings imply that early intervention with respect to aggression,
inter-ventions that focus on strengthening the parent-child bond and
conventional behavior, and interventions aimed at early drug use should
be most effective in reducing young adult drug use. Brook, J.S.,
Whiteman, M., Finch, S., and Cohen, P. Mutual Attachment, Personality,
and Drug Use: Pathways from Childhood to Young Adulthood. Gen Soc Gen
Psy Monogr, 124(4), pp. 492-510, 1998.
Drug Use Among School Dropouts Is Influenced by Association With
Drug Using Peers
A sample of 910 Mexican-American and white non-Hispanic school
dropouts were surveyed regarding their alcohol, marijuana, and other
drugs, and socialization characteristics that have previously been shown
to be predictive of adolescent substance use. A structural equation
model based on peer cluster theory was evaluated for goodness of fit and
for differences in model characteristics by ethnicity and gender.
Results partially confirmed peer cluster theory among school dropouts in
that association with drug-using peers was the most powerful direct
predictor of substance use. The effects of other socializing influences
were indirect, mediated through association with drug-using peers. Some
differences were present between Mexican-American and white non-Hispanic
subgroups. Results were similar to those obtained from previous tests of
this model among youth who remain in school, suggesting that social
influences on drug use are similar across students and school dropouts.
Association with drug-using peers dominates the prediction of substance
abuse among school dropouts. Family communication of drug use sanctions
helps to both limit substance use and strengthen family bonds. Prior
school adjustment is likely to be an important protective factor
limiting substance use among Mexican-American dropouts. Swaim, R.C.,
Bates, M.S., and Chevez, E. Structural Equation Socialization Model of
Substance Use Among Mexican-American and White Non-Hispanic School
Dropouts. J Adolesc Health, 23, pp. 128-138, 1998.
Clusters Of Marijuana Use In The United States
To assess the extent of clustering of marijuana use within United
States neighborhoods, researchers at Johns Hopkins University analyzed
data from the annual National Household Survey on Drug Abuse conducted
during the period 1990-1995 using alternating logistic regression, a
recently developed statistical method. Estimates of pairwise odds ratios
ranged from 1.3 (95% confidence interval 1.22-1.42) for the lifetime
history of marijuana use to 2.0 (95% confidence interval 1.6-2.6) for
recent sharing of marijuana from one person to another. This is
approximately the same order of magnitude as the clustering of diarrheal
disease in villages of the less developed nations of the world. The
extent of clustering of marijuana use was not very dependent upon either
neighborhood-level or individual-level characteristics measured in the
survey (e.g., age, sex, race, income levels). The more recent and
intensive the marijuana use, the greater the clustering within
neighborhoods. In addition, the practice of sharing marijuana with other
persons also occurs in clusters within neighborhoods. This sharing may
be one of the fundamental interpersonal and social processes that
accounts for clustering of marijuana use; it is a potential target for
future community- and school-oriented prevention programs to curb the
increasing prevalence of youthful marijuana use. Bobashev, G.V., and
Anthony, J.C. American Journal of Epidemiology, 148(12), pp. 1168-1174,
Dec. 1998.
Substance Abuse And Associated Psychosocial Problems Among Argentina
Adolescents: Sex Heterogeneity And Familial Transmission
Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh collaborated with
researchers in Argentina on a study to clarify the effects of sex and
familial transmission in the psychosocial concomitants of substance
abuse problems among adolescents. Male (N=956) and female (N=303)
adolescents in school, and male adolescents in a drug treatment program
(N=51) in Buenos Aires Province, Argentina were administered a
translated version of the Drug Use Screening Inventory. Use of
substances, familial substance abuse and associations between
psychosocial problem domains and substance abuse problems were examined.
Substance abuse and psychosocial problems varied broadly by sex. Female
adolescents in the school-based sample were found to generally report
higher levels of psychosocial problems and greater use of minor
tranquilizers than school boys or boys in treatment for substance abuse.
Conduct deviancy was associated with substance abuse problems only in
males, while health problems were associated only in females. However,
among all youth, substance abuse problems were found to be associated
with older age, greater social competency, problems in school
performance, and involvement with deviant peers. Familial substance
abuse was associated with substance abuse problems among all
adolescents, but the pattern of associations with other psychosocial
problems differed between males and females. Heterogeneity in
socioeconomic status was found in the associations between psychosocial
problems, adolescent substance abuse, and familial substance abuse. The
results are consistent with a syndrome of problem behaviors and
demonstrate the cross-cultural consistency of sex heterogeneity in
adolescent substance abuse and its consequences. Moss, H.B., Bonicatto,
S., Kirisci, L., Girardelli, A.M., Murrelle, L. Drug and Alcohol
Dependence 52(3), pp. 221-230, 1998.
Executive Cognitive Functioning, Temperament, and Antisocial
Behavior in Conduct-Disordered Adolescent Females
Investigators from CEDAR assessed whether low executive cognitive
functioning (ECF) and a difficult temperament are related to aggressive
and nonaggressive forms of antisocial behavior (ASB) in 249,
14-18-year-old, conduct-disordered females and controls. ECF was
measured using neuropsychological tests; temperament was measured using
the Dimensions of Temperament Survey--Revised; and ASB was assessed
using psychiatric symptom counts for conduct disorder. The
conduct-disordered females exhibited lower ECF capacity and greater
difficult temperament compared with controls. The combined influence of
low ECF and difficult temperament was significantly related to both
forms of ASB. In comparison with low ECF, difficult temperament was more
strongly related to nonaggressive ASB, whereas in comparison with
difficult temperament, low ECF was more strongly related to aggressive
ASB. Last, ECF mediated the relation between difficult temperament and
aggressive ASB. Giancola, P.R., Mezzich, A.C., and Tarter, R.E. Journal
of Abnormal Psychology. 107(4), pp. 629-641, Nov 1998.
Co-morbidity between Panic Disorder and Alcoholism May Not Be a
Consequence of Self-medication of Panic Symptoms
This study examines the patterns of familial aggregation and
co-morbidity of alcoholism and anxiety disorders in the relatives of 165
probands selected for alcoholism and/or anxiety disorders compared to
those of 61 unaffected controls. Probands were either selected from
treatment settings or at random from the community. DSM-III-R diagnoses
were obtained for all probands and their 1,053 first-degree relatives,
based on direct interview or family history information. Findings
indicate (1) alcoholism was associated with anxiety disorders in the
relatives, particularly among females; (2) both alcoholism and anxiety
disorders were highly familial; (3) familial aggregation of alcoholism
was attributable to alcohol dependence rather than to alcohol abuse,
particularly among male relatives; and (4) the pattern of co-aggregation
of alcohol dependence and anxiety disorders in families differed
according to the subtype of anxiety disorder; there was evidence of a
partly shared diathesis underlying panic and alcoholism whereas social
phobia and alcoholism tended to aggregate independently. The finding
that the onset of social phobia tended to precede that of alcoholism,
when taken together with the independence of familial aggregation of
social phobia and alcoholism, supports a self-medication hypothesis for
the co-occurrence of social phobia and alcoholism. In contrast, the lack
of a systematic pattern in the order of onset of panic and alcoholism
among subjects with both disorders as well as evidence for shared
underlying familial risk factors suggest that co-morbidity between panic
disorder and alcoholism is not a consequence of self-medication of panic
symptoms. The study emphasizes the importance of examining co-morbid
disorders and subtypes thereof in identifying sources of heterogeneity
in the pathogenesis of alcoholism. Merikangas, K.R., Stevens, D.E.,
Fenton, B., Stolar, F.M., O'Malley, S., Woods, S.W., and Risch, N.
Co-morbidity and Familial Aggregation of Alcoholism and Anxiety
Disorders. Psychological Medicine 28, pp. 773-788, 1998.
The Etiology of Adult and Adolescent Substance Use May
Differ--Substance Use Patterns in Milwaukee Gangs
A study of the patterns of substance use by male and female gang
members in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, from their teenage years in the 1980s
into adulthood indicate that the gangs started out as one form of
neighborhood-based drug-using peer groups. Variation existed in drug use
but family variables explained little of the variation. Male gang
members raised in families with a history of gang involvement and drug
use were more likely than other gang members to use cocaine and to use
it seriously. On the other hand, severe family distress was not related
to onset, duration, nor seriousness of cocaine use in either males or
females. Cocaine use for both males and females increased in adulthood.
It appears that the etiology of adult and adolescent drug use may
differ. Neither social control theory nor differential association
theory is well suited to explain the variations in gang drug use by age
or gender. Hagedorn, J.M., Torres, J., and Giglio, G. Cocaine, Kicks,
and Strain: Patterns of Substance Use in Milwaukee Gangs. Contemporary
Drug Problems 25, Spring, pp. 113-145, 1998.
Stressful Life Events and Adolescent Substance Use and Depression:
Conditional and Gender Differentiated Effects
Stressful life circumstances have myriad influences on human health
and behavior. Early research focused on the variable distribution of
stress and its effects by socioeconomic status, race, and gender. More
recent research indicates that variation by age is also an important
consideration. For example, adolescent reactions to stressful life
events are often inconsistent with adult reactions to similar life
situations and transitions. Moreover, since most studies assess only a
single outcome-usually depression-they risk classification bias since
analyses exclude other potential stress-related outcomes. This paper
assesses the gender distinct effects of stressful life events on two
outcomes among adolescents, substance use and depressive symptoms. The
results of a second-order regression model indicate that life events
affect female, but not male, depressive symptoms, especially when
self-esteem is low or mastery is high. Furthermore, life events affect
substance use when peer drug use is high, or when parental support is
low, but this latter effect is limited to female adolescents. Hoffmann,
J.P., and Su, S.S. Substance Use & Misuse 33(11), pp. 2219-2262,
1998.
Major Depression in Children of Parents Dependent on Opiates is
Associated with Increased Risk of Physical Health Problems
A study to examine the strength and specificity of the association
between depression and physical health problems in children and
adolescents whose parents were dependent upon opiates found the
offspring to be at increased risk of physical health problems. The
sample consisted of offspring ages 6-17 (mean age 11 years) of opiate
addicts who had a history of MDD (N=28); other mood disorders (N=31); no
history of mood disorders but other psychiatric disorders (N=92); or no
history of psychiatric disorder (N=127). Detailed psychiatric assessment
and medical history of the offspring by direct interview with the
offspring and an informant were obtained blind to parental diagnosis.
After controlling for possible confounders, there was an increased risk
of dermatological disorders, headache, other neurological/neuromuscular
disorders, bronchitis, other respiratory disorders and hospitalizations
for nonsurgical procedures in offspring with MDD, as compared to
nonpsychiatrically ill controls. The offspring with other mood disorders
had a slightly elevated risk. Major depression in children and
adolescents whose parents are dependent on opiates is associated with
increased risk of physical health problems. This is consistent with
other reports; however, the timing of the physical health problems
requires further study. McAvay, G.M., Nunes, E.V., Zaider, T.I.,
Goldstein, R.B., Weissman, M.M. Physical Health Problems in Depressed
and Non Depressed Children and Adolescents of Parents with Opiate
Dependence. Depression and Anxiety, 9, 1999.
Startle Response May Be Vulnerability Marker to Discriminate among
Children at Risk for Development of Anxiety Disorders and/or
Alcoholism
This study examined startle reflex as a possible vulnerability marker
among offspring of parents with anxiety disorders and/or alcoholism.
Subjects were male and female offspring (N=66), 10 to 17 years of age,
of probands who participated in a family study of comorbidity of
alcoholism and anxiety disorders. Testing consisted of examining the
startle reflex and its modulation by prepulse stimuli (prepulse
facilitation and prepulse inhibition). Different components of the
startle discriminated among children of parents with anxiety disorders
and/or alcoholism, and children of normal controls. Specifically,
startle magnitude was elevated in children with a parental history of an
anxiety disorder whereas startle habituation and prepulse inhibition
were impaired in children with a parental history of alcoholism.
Findings suggest that individual differences in startle reflex may serve
as a vulnerability marker for the development of anxiety disorders and
alcohol problems. Grillon, C., Dierker, L., and Merikangas, K.R.
Fear-Potentiated Startle in Adolescent Offspring of Parents with Anxiety
Disorders. Biological Psychiatry, 44, pp. 990-997, 1998.
Ethnic and Gender Differences in Drug Use and Resistance
A survey was conducted to measure drug use, drug offers and drug
resistance and to compare male and female members of different ethnic
groups in seventh grade classes in the Phoenix metropolitan area. The
survey was administered to over 4,000 students, with usable data
obtained from 3,080. Significant ethnic and gender differences were
described in drug use and, more importantly, in the drug offer and
resistance process. Results indicate younger adolescents (12-13) do not
possess large or sophisticated repertoires of strategies to resist drug
offers and most offers come from acquaintances while previous studies
report offers come from more intimate relationships for older
adolescents. Also illustrated was that ethnicity and gender are related
to drug use and how drugs are offered and resisted. This suggests that
ethnic and gender specific approaches are needed in prevention curricula
and refusal and life skills should be stressed. Moon, D.G., Hecht, M.L.,
Jackson, K.M., & Spellers, R. Ethnic and Gender Differences and
Similarities in Adolescent Drug Use and the Drug Resistance Process.
Substance Use and Misuse, 34, pp. 1059-1083, 1999.
Parental Monitoring
The link between parental monitoring and child problem behavior has
been established in three areas: substance abuse, anti-social behavior,
and safety and injury. This paper reviews the work to date on the
construct and accomplishes three goals: first, to provide an empirical
rationale for placing parental monitoring of children's activities as a
key construct in development and prevention research; second, to
stimulate more research on parental monitoring and provide an
integrative framework for various research traditions as well as
developmental periods of interest; third, to discuss current
methodological issues that are developmentally and culturally sensitive
and based on sound measurement. Possible intervention and prevention
strategies that specifically target parental monitoring are discussed.
Dishion, T.J., and McMahon, R.J. Parental Monitoring and the Prevention
of Child and Adolescent Problem Behavior: A Conceptual and Empirical
Formulation. Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review, 1, pp. 61-75,
1998.
Antecedents of Substance Use Initiation
Initiation of substance use before the age of 15-16 is a distinct
risk factor for a variety of mental health problems and eventual drug
abuse. Using multi-method, multi-agent measures of child, family, and
peer antecedents at age 9-10, the investigators studied the longitudinal
effects in an at-risk sample of 206 boys. Event history analysis was
used to examine the antecedents to patterned alcohol and tobacco use,
and experimentation with marijuana between age 11-16. Univariate models
revealed that at Grade 4, most constructs were prognostic of boys' early
substance use. Multivariate event history models clarified the risk and
protective structure associated with tobacco, alcohol and marijuana use.
The effects of family context, family management and peer factors were
entirely mediated through characteristics of the boys at Grade 4 for
alcohol initiation. Anti-social behavior was key for early onset alcohol
and marijuana use. Low SES and low sociometric status were predictive of
early tobacco use. Interaction effects for prediction of marijuana and
tobacco onset indicated that their association with family management
and boy's characteristics may vary by level of parental substance use.
Dishion, T.J., Capaldi, D.M., and Yoerger, K. Middle Childhood
Antecedents to Progression in Male Adolescent Substance Use: An
Ecological Analysis of Risk and Protection. Journal of Adolescent
Research, 14(2), pp. 175-206, 1999.
Sexual and Physical Abuse at Home Predicts Suicide Attempts by
Homeless Street Youth
A study was conducted to examine the relationship between home life
risk factors and suicide attempts among homeless and runaway street
youth recruited from both shelters and street locations in Denver, New
York City, and San Francisco. Street youth (N=775) age 12-19 years old
were recruited in 1992 and 1993 by street outreach staff for interview.
Cross-sectional, retrospective data were analyzed to examine the
relationship between suicide attempts and antecedent home life
variables. Suicide attempts were reported by 48% of the females and 27%
of the males, with a mean of 6.2 times for females and 5.1 times for
males. Among the females, 70% reported sexual abuse and 35% reported
physical abuse; among males, 24% reported sexual abuse and 35% reported
physical abuse. Sexual and physical abuse before leaving home were
independent predictors of suicide attempts for both females and males.
Among street youth in this study who were sexually or physically abused,
the odds of attempting suicide were 1.9 to 4.3 times the odds of
attempting suicide among those not sexually or physically abused.
Interventions attempting to reduce risk behaviors in this population
must include assessments of suicidal behaviors as well as components for
assisting youth in dealing with the behavioral and emotional sequelae of
sexual and physical abuse. Molnar, B.E., Shade, S.B., Kral, A., et al.
Suicidal Behavior and Sexual/Physical Abuse Among Street Youth. Child
Abuse and Neglect, 22 (3): pp. 213-222, 1998.
Pregnancy Among Three National Samples of Runaway and Homeless
Youth
Investigators at Research Triangle Institute compared estimates of
the prevalence of pregnancy among runaway and homeless youth between the
ages of 14 and 17 years in various settings with each other and with
youth in the general population. Comparisons used three surveys of
youth: (1) the first nationally representative survey of runaway and
homeless youth residing in federally and non-federally funded shelter,
(2) a multi-city survey of street youth, and (3) a nationally
representative household survey of youth with and without recent runaway
and homeless experiences. Youth living on the streets had the highest
lifetime rates of pregnancy (48%), followed by youth residing in
shelters (33%) and household youth (<10%). The investigators concluded
that shelter and street youth were at much greater risk of having ever
been pregnant than were youth in households regardless of whether they
had recent runaway or homeless experiences. Such youth need
comprehensive services, including pregnancy prevention, family planning,
and prenatal and parenting services. Greene, J., and Ringwalt, C.
Journal of Adolescent Health, 23(6), pp. 370-377, 1998.
A Test of the Social Development Model
The social development model (SDM) is a general theory of human
behavior that hypothesizes that similar developmental processes can lead
to either prosocial or antisocial outcomes. The current study examines
the relation between family behavior and early anti-social behavior
using data on 938 first and second grade students in ten suburban public
elementary schools. Children were part of the longitudinal Raising
Healthy Children project, which began in 1993. Child, teacher and parent
reports were collected annually in the spring from 1994 through 1996.
Analysis one examined the prosocial path of the SDM. The model fit well,
explaining 25% of the variance in early antisocial behavior. However,
the path between skills and rewards from the family was not significant.
A better fit was obtained when the model included paths from skills to
beliefs and skills to antisocial behavior. In analysis two, the sample
was split into two groups, those whose parents modeled problem behavior
(heavy drinking, illicit drug use and domestic violence) and those who
did not. Two differences emerged between the two groups. First, the
strength of the path between skills and problem behavior was
significantly stronger for children whose parents modeled problem
behaviors. Second, the belief in family values path to antisocial
behavior was not significant for children whose parents modeled problem
behaviors. Thus, beliefs provide a significant protective effect for
children whose parents do not model problem behaviors, but not for
children in families where parents model problem behaviors. Catalano,
R.F., Oxford, M., Harachi, T.W., Abbott, R. D., Haggerty, K.P. Modeling
the Development of Early Antisocial Behavior: A Test of the Social
Development Model to Predict Problem Behavior during the During the
Elementary School Period. Criminal Behavior and Mental Health, 9, pp.
40-57, 1999.
Psychopathology Among Offspring of Parents with Substance Abuse
and/or Anxiety Disorders
In a study with a high-risk population of children under age 18 of
parents who served as probands in a family study of comorbidity of
substance abuse and anxiety disorders, there was a strong degree of
specificity of familial aggregation of both the anxiety disorders and
substance use disorders. Rates of conduct disorder and depression were
elevated among offspring of all affected parents. Inclusion of co-parent
disorders in the evaluation of familial transmission in the present
study strengthened the findings regarding the specificity of
transmission of the anxiety disorders and the links between both
parental substance abuse and antisocial personality with child conduct
disorder. Merikangas, K.R., Dierker, L.C., and Szatmari, P.
Psychopathology Among Offspring of Parents with Substance Abuse and/or
Anxiety Disorders: A High-Risk Study. Journal of Child Psychology and
Psychiatry, 39(5), pp. 711-720, 1998.
Extracurricular Activities Related to School Retention Among Mexican
Americans Students
With a growing Mexican American population and an increasing dropout
rate predicted for this group, research is needed to examine ways of
deterring this trend and increasing retention rates. The current study
examined extracurricular activity, perception of school, and ethnic
identification, and the association with school retention rates among
Mexican American and White non-Hispanics. Individuals reporting
participation in extracurricular activity were 2.30 times more likely to
be enrolled in school than were those not participating in
extracurricular activity. Mexican Americans reporting a higher White
non-Hispanic ethnic identity level were 2.41 times more likely to be
enrolled in school and had a more positive perception of school than did
Mexican American individuals reporting low levels of White non-Hispanic
ethnic identification. Davalos, D.B., Chavez, E.L., and Guardiola, R.J.
The Effects of Extracurricular Activity, Ethnic Identification, and
Perception of School on Student Dropout Rates. Hispanic J Behavioral
Sciences, 21(1), pp. 61-77, 1999.
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