AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed strategies for keeping 405 African-American and White youth engaged in a 4-year research project on substance use.
  • Ninety-one percent of the participants stayed in the study throughout its duration, with 87% of African-Americans and 96% of Whites remaining involved.
  • A logistic regression showed that sex was the only significant factor predicting retention, indicating that girls were more likely to stay in the study than boys, while ethnicity was close to being significant.

Article Abstract

The current investigation discusses successful strategies used to retain N = 405 African-American and White target youth in a longitudinal, non-intervention study focused on alcohol and other drug use. Ninety-one percent of youth remained in the study for all 4 years, including 87% of African-Americans and 96% of Whites. In a logistic regression model incorporating age, ethnicity, income, sex, parent/guardian marital status, parent alcohol use, and family cohesion, only sex significantly predicted retention, with girls being more likely to remain in the study compared with boys, although ethnicity neared significance.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/J233v05n03_07DOI Listing

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