Perspectives on adolescent substance use. A defined population study
T. N. Robinson, J. D. Killen, C. B. Taylor, M. J. Telch, S. W. Bryson, K. E. Saylor, D. J. Maron, N. Maccoby and J. W. Farquhar
Department of Medicine, Stanford (Calif) University School of Medicine.
We asked 1447 tenth graders to complete a survey on physical activity,
nutrition, stress, and substance use and to undergo basic physical
assessments. In a multiple regression analysis, increased level of
substance use by both boys and girls was most strongly predicted by
friends' marijuana use. For boys, this was followed by perceived safety of
cigarette smoking; poor school performance; parents' education; and use of
diet pills, laxatives, or diuretics for weight control, accounting for 44%
of the overall variation in substance use. For girls, friends' marijuana
use was followed by poor school performance; self-induced vomiting for
weight control; perceived safety of cigarette smoking; use of diet pills,
laxatives, or diuretics for weight control; parents' education; perceived
adult attitudes about cigarettes; and nonuse of seat belts, accounting for
53% of the overall variance. Separate multiple regression analyses for each
substance produced similar results. The homogeneity of the study population
precluded ethnic comparisons. These findings suggest that for many purposes
substance use may be considered a single behavior regardless of the
specific substance(s) used and that substance use may exist as part of a
syndrome of adolescent problem behaviors. In addition, the potent influence
of perceived social environment suggests that a social influence resistance
model may represent the most successful preventive strategy.
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Chapter 4: School-Based Research on Health Behavior Change: The Stanford Adolescent Heart Health Program as a Model for Cardiovascular Disease Risk Reduction
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