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Journal Article

Citation

Duncan DT, Palamar JJ, Williams JH. Subst. Abuse Treat. Prev. Policy 2014; 9(1): e35.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/1747-597X-9-35

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study examined associations between perceived neighborhood illicit drug selling, peer illicit drug disapproval and illicit drug use among a large nationally representative sample of U.S. high school seniors.

METHODS: Data come from Monitoring the Future (2007-2011), an annual cross-sectional survey of U.S. high school seniors. Students reported neighborhood illicit drug selling, friend drug disapproval towards marijuana and cocaine use, and past 12-month and past 30-day illicit drug use (N = 10,050). Multinomial logistic regression models were fit to explain use of 1) just marijuana, 2) one illicit drug other than marijuana, and 3) more than one illicit drug other than marijuana, compared to " no use".

RESULTS: Report of neighborhood illicit drug selling was associated with lower friend disapproval of marijuana and cocaine; e.g., those who reported seeing neighborhood sales " almost every day" were less likely to report their friends strongly disapproved of marijuana (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 0.38, 95% CI: 0.29, 0.49) compared to those who reported never seeing neighborhood drug selling and reported no disapproval. Perception of neighborhood illicit drug selling was also associated with past-year drug use and past-month drug use; e.g., those who reported seeing neighborhood sales " almost every day" were more likely to report 30-day use of more than one illicit drug (AOR = 11.11, 95% CI: 7.47, 16.52) compared to those who reported never seeing neighborhood drug selling and reported no 30-day use of illicit drugs.

CONCLUSIONS: Perceived neighborhood drug selling was associated with lower peer disapproval and more illicit drug use among a population-based nationally representative sample of U.S. high school seniors. Policy interventions to reduce " open" (visible) neighborhood drug selling (e.g., problem-oriented policing and modifications to the physical environment such as installing and monitoring surveillance cameras) may reduce illicit drug use and peer disapproval of illicit drugs. © 2014 Duncan et al.; [published by BioMed Central]

Keywords: Cannabis impaired driving; DUID; Ethanol impaired driving


Language: en

Keywords

Adolescent; Humans; Schools; United States; adolescent; Cross-Sectional Studies; Questionnaires; Logistic Models; human; Young Adult; Adolescents; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice; young adult; questionnaire; school; Illicit drug use; cross-sectional study; statistical model; attitude to health; drug traffic; street drug; Street Drugs; peer group; economics; child psychology; Drug Trafficking; Neighborhood drug selling; Peer drug attitudes; Peer Group; psychology; Psychology, Adolescent

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