Ramchand Rajeev, Pacula Rosalie Liccardo, Iguchi Martin Y
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 624 North Broadway, 8th Floor, Baltimore, MD 21205, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2006 Oct 1;84(3):264-72. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2006.02.010. Epub 2006 Apr 5.
A recent study of arrest data show that African Americans are 2.5 times more likely to be arrested for marijuana possession offences than Whites, even though general prevalence estimates show that they are no more likely to be using. The current study investigates the purchase patterns of marijuana users from the 2002 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) to evaluate whether differences in purchasing behaviors exist across racial groups. Although in general people who purchase marijuana are more likely to buy in private settings and from someone they know, this analysis shows that African Americans are statistically more likely to engage in risky purchasing behaviors that increase their likelihood of arrest. Using trivariate probit regression with demographic, drug use, and drug market covariates, analyses reveal that African Americans are nearly twice as likely to buy outdoors (0.31 versus 0.14), three times more likely to buy from a stranger (0.30 versus 0.09), and significantly more likely to buy away from their homes (0.61 versus 0.48). These results provide an additional explanation for the differential in arrest rates between African Americans and Whites.
一项最近的逮捕数据研究表明,非裔美国人因持有大麻罪被捕的可能性是白人的2.5倍,尽管总体流行率估计显示他们使用大麻的可能性并不更高。当前的研究调查了2002年全国药物使用和健康调查(NSDUH)中大麻使用者的购买模式,以评估不同种族群体在购买行为上是否存在差异。虽然一般来说,购买大麻的人更有可能在私下里从他们认识的人那里购买,但该分析表明,从统计学角度来看,非裔美国人更有可能从事增加其被捕可能性的危险购买行为。通过使用包含人口统计学、药物使用和毒品市场协变量的三变量概率单位回归分析发现,非裔美国人在户外购买的可能性几乎是其他人的两倍(0.31对0.14),从陌生人那里购买的可能性是其他人的三倍(0.30对0.09),并且离家购买的可能性显著更高(0.61对0.48)。这些结果为非裔美国人和白人之间逮捕率的差异提供了额外的解释。