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Alcohol and Other Substance Abuse in Adolescence
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Past month alcohol use, high school students 2003
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Drank Alcohol (more than few sips) < age 13 (2003)
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Heavy Drinking (5 or more drinks one occasion), Past Month, 2003
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Drinking and Driving (past 30 days), 2003
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Riding With Driver Who Had Been Drinking (past 30 days)
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Blood Alcohol Levels-Males
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Blood Alcohol Levels, Females
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BAL In 1 Hour of Drinking
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BAL in 2 Hours of Drinking
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Marijuana Use, Past 30 Days
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Lifetime cocaine use, H.S. students, 2003 Other substances, 2003 data, h.s. seniors: 7% had tried amphetamines 12% had tried inhalants 6% had used illegal steroids (5% females, 7% males)
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Lifetime Use of Ecstasy Among High Schoolers (2003)
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Marijuana Use Before Age 13 (2003)
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8th Grader’s “Ever Used” Substance Use From Early 90’s to 2005
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H.S. Seniors’ Substance Use From Early 90’s to 2005
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Alcohol and Marijuana Use By Age Osgood et al., 1996: young adulthood has highest rate of substance use because it has highest unstructured socializing. By mid- to late-20’s, social role obligations (marriage and parenthood, work) increase. Rates drop for all groups by their 30’s, biggest drop for Caucasian males.
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Progression of Substance Abuse Other Illicit Drugs Beer or Wine CigarettesHard Liquor Marijuana Gateway Drugs
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Levels of Substance Use/Abuse n Experimental substance use: try a drug once or twice to see what it’s like (very common) n Social substance use: Use substances only during social activities (e.g., at parties) n Medicinal substance use: Use drugs to relieve unpleasant emotions (e.g., loneliness) (self- medicating) n Addictive substance use: Includes tolerance (need to use more of the drug to get high) and withdrawal symptoms (e.g. anxiety, tremors)
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Is experimenting with drugs bad? (Shedler & Block, 1990) n Teens who experiment with alcohol or marijuana (i.e., < 1x/month), and those who abstain after reflective decision- making, have better current and previous mental health than those who abstain without reflection, frequent drug users, and those using drugs other than alcohol and marijuana.
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Correlates of Adolescent Substance Abuse n Depression, Anxiety n Risky Behaviors: –Unprotected sex –Automobile crashes –Fatal drowning, fatal falls n Antisocial behaviors, anger, impulsivity n Long-term health risks--heart, kidney, liver disease n Academic problems n Peers who use drugs, accept drug use
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Intergenerational Family Transmission of Alcoholism Poor Parental Monitoring Family Stress and Conflict Disrupted Family Routines and Rituals (parental abuse)
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Prevention of Alcohol and Substance Abuse in Adolescence n Focus has been on three factors: n Supply of drugs –International drug seizures, border control –Police and sentencing crackdowns –Generally only modest effects n Individual characteristics of the potential drug user n Macro level: Community, social context, media
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Programs Focusing on Individual n Strengthen the “host” (e.g., build self esteem) –Ineffective n Education about dangers of drugs and or Social Skills training –Example: DARE. –Largely ineffective –Knowledge doesn’t necessarily translate to behavior change
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Macro level programs n Community prevention efforts. Focus not only on students, but also train: –teachers –parents –peers (i.e., large community effort, multiple high schools) n Show more promising effects, but they are expensive
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