3.8 Article

Dealing with Zeros: Adolescent Drug Use, Perceived Disapproval, and Perceived Harm

Journal

JOURNAL OF DRUG EDUCATION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00472379231217820

Keywords

youth; drug use; zero-inflated errors; marijuana

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This study demonstrates the use of zero-inflated negative binomial regression models to examine the excessive zeros in drug use frequency among youth. The findings suggest that perceptions of parental disapproval are a better predictor of marijuana use, and perceived harm is related to marijuana use.
Because studies examining youth drug use often have data with a high proportion of zeros, they often do not meet the assumptions for univariate or linear regression analyses that are typically used. We demonstrate the use of zero-inflated negative binomial regression models to address excessive zeros in drug use frequency on perceptions of disapproval and perceived harm among middle and high school students (N = 522). We found that perceptions of parent disapproval were a better predictor of marijuana use (p = .01) than peer disapproval. Perceived harm was related to marijuana use (p = .04). Researchers should consider using zero-inflated negative binomial regression models when examining youth drug use.

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