Predictors of Substance Use Initiation by Early Adolescence
The American journal of psychiatry, ISSN: 1535-7228, Vol: 181, Issue: 5, Page: 423-433
2024
- 6Citations
- 20Captures
- 4Mentions
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Metrics Details
- Citations6
- Citation Indexes6
- CrossRef2
- Captures20
- Readers20
- 20
- Mentions4
- News Mentions4
- 4
Most Recent News
Religion, race among top predictors of substance use initiation in early adolescence
NEW YORK — Factors across multiple domains, including demographic characteristics and parenting behaviors, appeared predictive of substance use initiation in early adolescence, according to study results. “Most of the previous studies I was looking at when I started getting into this work exclusively focused on only one or two of these domains, but very few integrated multiple,” ReJoyce Green, PhD
Article Description
OBJECTIVE: Substance use initiation during early adolescence is associated with later development of substance use and mental health disorders. This study used various domains to predict substance use initiation, defined as trying any nonprescribed substance (e.g., alcohol, tobacco, cannabis), by age 12, using a large longitudinal data set. METHODS: Substance-naive youths from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study (ages 9-10; N=6,829) were followed for 3 years. A total of 420 variables were examined as predictors of substance use initiation, using a penalized logistic regression with elastic net; domains spanned demographic characteristics, self and peer involvement with substance use, parenting behaviors, mental and physical health, culture and environment, hormones, neurocognitive functioning, and structural neuroimaging. RESULTS: By age 12, 982 (14.4%) children reported substance initiation, with alcohol being the most common. Models with only self-report predictors had similar prediction performance to models adding hormones, neurocognitive factors, and neuroimaging predictors (AUCtest=0.66). Sociodemographic factors were the most robust predictors, followed by cultural and environmental factors, physical health factors, and parenting behaviors. The top predictor was a religious preference of Mormon (coefficient=-0.87), followed by a religious preference for Jewish (coefficient=0.32), and by Black youths (coefficient=-0.32). CONCLUSIONS: Sociodemographic variables were the most robust predictors of substance use initiation. Adding resource-intensive measures, including hormones, neurocognitive assessment, and structural neuroimaging, did not improve prediction of substance use initiation. The application of these large-scale findings in clinical settings could help to streamline and tailor prevention and early intervention efforts.
Bibliographic Details
American Psychiatric Association Publishing
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