AI Article Synopsis

  • A study looked into why many high school students in Norway who were treated for drug use problems dropped out of school early.
  • It found that 89% of these students left school before graduating, while only 27% of their peers without drug issues did the same.
  • The research suggests that teens in substance use treatment are at a higher risk of not finishing school, highlighting the need for better health and education support for them.

Article Abstract

Objective: To examine early school leaving in a longitudinal cohort of all high school students treated for substance use disorder (SUD) and their demographic counterparts in Norway.

Method: From the National Patient and National Population Registries, we extracted (a) all high school students born in 1991-1992 who received SUD treatment during 2009-2010 ( = 648; = 95, = 327, and = 226) and (b) their age-and-gender matched counterparts ( = 647). From the National Educational Database, we obtained enrollment and graduation status for these two cohorts throughout the designated school period of 5 years. We estimated the hazards of early school leaving as a function of students' treatment for alcohol, cannabis, and other drug use disorders and other known risk factors.

Results: Nine out of 10 adolescents receiving SUD treatment left high school early (89%) compared with one in four (27%) from the matched cohort; 422 (73.5%) of these left high school during or after the treatment year. Multivariate discrete-time models revealed significant and ordered associations between receiving SUD treatment and early school leaving, HR = 3.09 [1.96, 4.89], HR = 3.83 [2.64, 5.56], HR = 5.16 [3.32, 8.03], even after accounting for individual-level (sex, immigrant background, criminal charges, and mental health treatment), family-level (family structure, parental education, and family income), and structural risk factors (municipal size, county employment, and dropout rates).

Conclusion: Adolescents receiving SUD treatment remain especially vulnerable for early school leaving. These findings underscore the importance of improving and coordinating health and educational services for youth in SUD treatment. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/adb0001023DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

early school
20
school leaving
20
sud treatment
20
high school
16
receiving sud
12
school
10
treatment
9
school students
8
adolescents receiving
8
left high
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!