Warner Tara D
J Youth Adolesc. 2016 Jan;45(1):35-53. doi: 10.1007/s10964-015-0370-5.
The current understanding of the neighborhood contexts wherein adolescent substance use emerges remains limited by conflicting findings regarding geographic variation in, and neighborhood effects on, both the prevalence of and risk factors for such use. Using four waves of longitudinal data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health [n = 18,697 (51% female, 54% White, 24% Black, 16 % Hispanic, 7% Asian, 2% American Indian/Other)], latent class analysis, and growth curve modeling, this study identified distinct neighborhood types--patterned by race/ethnicity, socioeconomic class, and geography--and explored how trajectories of adolescent and young adult marijuana use differed across neighborhood types. The results demonstrated complexity in neighborhood contexts, illustrating variation in trajectories of marijuana use across neighborhood types heretofore unobserved in neighborhoods research, and largely unexplained by key individual, family, and peer risk and protective factors. This approach highlights how social structural forces intersect and anchor trajectories of youth substance-using risk behavior
目前对于青少年物质使用出现的邻里环境的理解,仍然受到关于此类使用的流行率及其风险因素在地理差异和邻里影响方面相互矛盾的研究结果的限制。本研究利用来自青少年到成人健康纵向研究的四波纵向数据[n = 18,697(51%为女性,54%为白人,24%为黑人,16%为西班牙裔,7%为亚裔,2%为美洲印第安人/其他)]、潜在类别分析和生长曲线模型,确定了由种族/族裔、社会经济阶层和地理位置构成的不同邻里类型,并探讨了青少年和青年成人使用大麻的轨迹在不同邻里类型之间的差异。结果表明邻里环境具有复杂性,揭示了不同邻里类型之间大麻使用轨迹的差异,这在以往的邻里研究中未被观察到,并且在很大程度上无法用关键的个人、家庭和同伴风险及保护因素来解释。这种方法突出了社会结构力量如何相互交织并决定青少年物质使用风险行为的轨迹。