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Ecology and drug use: universal predictors across time and place. | LitMetric

Ecology and drug use: universal predictors across time and place.

Psychol Rep

Department of Psychiatry, New York University School of Medicine, 215 Lexington Avenue, 15th Floor, New York, NY 10016, USA.

Published: June 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzes the connections between environmental and social factors and marijuana use among adolescents across three diverse populations: white children from the northeastern USA, African-American and Puerto Rican youths in NYC, and teenagers in Colombia.
  • Findings reveal that ecological factors significantly influence marijuana use, with direct and indirect effects through family, peer, and personality influences.
  • The research suggests that prevention programs should target the specific environmental contexts of adolescents while addressing common risk factors that predict marijuana use across different groups.

Article Abstract

The interrelation of ecological and psychosocial risk factors and adolescent marijuana use is examined in this three-sample longitudinal data analysis. Participants included (a) white children from the northeast of the USA, (b) African-American and Puerto Rican adolescents from New York City, and (c) adolescents living in Colombia, South America. Adolescents were interviewed in their homes. Independent measures were from the ecological, personality, peer, and family domains. Logistic regression analysis showed that the majority of ecological variables was related to adolescent marijuana use. Hierarchical regression analysis demonstrated that the ecological domain was directly and indirectly related to adolescent marijuana use (via the family, peer, and personality domains). Intervention programs should focus on adolescents' unique ecological settings while targeting universal risk factors (e.g., low ego integration, low parental identification) which predict adolescents' marijuana use. Similarities among the ecological predictors of adolescents' marijuana use in three samples, across time and place, allow a more universal approach to the prevention of substance use.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2853011PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/PR0.104.3.989-1006DOI Listing

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