3.8 Article

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

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Criminology & Penology

Revisiting the Association Between Attachment to Parents and Adolescent Substance Use: Conditional Effects of Parental Disapproval

Ryan C. Meldrum et al.

Summary: Social bond theory and social learning theory present different perspectives on the relationship between attachment to parents and substance use. This study, using data from Florida students, found that the level of parental disapproval of substance use significantly influenced youth's own substance use, interacting with attachment to parents. These findings challenge the assumption that greater attachment to parents universally protects against substance use and support the social learning theory.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE (2023)

Article Substance Abuse

The Relationship Between Sexual Intercourse Before the age of 13 and Alcohol, Tobacco, and Other Drug use among High School Students

Michael Dunn et al.

Summary: Research has shown that early sexual initiation is associated with poor health outcomes, but little is known about the relationship between even earlier sexual initiation and ATOD use. This study found that early sexual initiation predicted higher rates of ATOD use among high school students, highlighting the need for comprehensive education in both ATOD use and sexual health.

JOURNAL OF DRUG EDUCATION (2022)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

Perceived risk of harm from monthly cannabis use among US adolescents: National Survey on drug Use and Health, 2017

Abigail Cadua Mariani et al.

Summary: A study showed that more than 80% of adolescents perceived monthly cannabis use as harmful, with this perception influenced by peer attitude towards cannabis use, peers' disapproval of cannabis use, perception of school importance, and participation in extracurricular activities. Adolescents who perceived monthly cannabis use as risky generally had strict parental monitoring, low peer use perception, high peer disapproval of cannabis use, importance placed on school, and active involvement in extracurricular activities.

PREVENTIVE MEDICINE REPORTS (2021)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Early Adolescent Substance Use Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Longitudinal Survey in the ABCD Study Cohort

William E. Pelham et al.

Summary: The study found that during the COVID-19 pandemic, early adolescents reduced alcohol use but increased nicotine use and prescription drug misuse. Youth were more likely to use substances during the pandemic when they were facing pandemic-related uncertainty, experiencing material hardship in their families, their parents used alcohol or drugs, or they experienced more severe depression or anxiety. Several risk factors were stronger among older adolescents compared to younger ones.

JOURNAL OF ADOLESCENT HEALTH (2021)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

Marijuana Legalization and Youth Marijuana, Alcohol, and Cigarette Use and Norms

Jennifer A. Bailey et al.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE (2020)

Article Psychology, Clinical

Modeling change trajectories with count and zero-inflated outcomes: Challenges and recommendations

Kevin J. Grimm et al.

ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS (2019)

Article Psychiatry

Cannabis Use during Adolescent Development: Susceptibility to Psychiatric Illness

Benjamin Chadwick et al.

Frontiers in Psychiatry (2013)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

Analysis of overdispersed count data: application to the Human Papillomavirus Infection in Men (HIM) Study

J. -H. Lee et al.

EPIDEMIOLOGY AND INFECTION (2012)

Article Statistics & Probability

Score Tests for Zero-Inflation in Overdispersed Count Data

Zhao Yang et al.

COMMUNICATIONS IN STATISTICS-THEORY AND METHODS (2010)

Review Health Care Sciences & Services

Mixture models for quantitative HIV RNA data

LH Moulton et al.

STATISTICAL METHODS IN MEDICAL RESEARCH (2002)