Banks Devin E, Rowe Alia T, Mpofu Philani, Zapolski Tamika C B
Department of Psychology, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, 420 University Blvd., Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA.
Department of Psychology, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, 420 University Blvd., Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2017 Oct 1;179:71-77. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.06.026. Epub 2017 Jul 21.
Substance use during adolescence is a public health concern due to associated physical and behavioral health consequences. Such consequences are amplified among concurrent substance users. Although sex and racial/ethnic differences in single-substance use have been observed, the current literature is inconclusive as to whether differences exist in the prevalence of concurrent use. The current study used data from the 2011-2014 National Survey on Drug Use and Health to examine typologies (single and concurrent patterns) of alcohol, marijuana, and cigarette use among current adolescent users age 12-18 by sex and race/ethnicity. Participants were 14,667 White, Hispanic, African American, Asian, and Native American adolescents. The most common typology was alcohol only, followed by concurrent use of alcohol and marijuana. Weighted prevalence estimates indicated that adolescent females were more likely to be current users of alcohol only, whereas male adolescents were more likely to belong to all other typologies. Compared to Whites, racial/ethnic minorities had larger proportions of marijuana only users and were generally less likely than or equally likely to be concurrent users. One exception was for African American adolescents, who were more likely to be alcohol and marijuana users than their White counterparts. Results suggest that concurrent substance use is common among U.S. adolescents, making up over 40% of past-month use, but typologies of use vary by sex and race/ethnicity. Preventive interventions should consider all typologies of use rather than only single substance exposures and address patterns of use that are most pertinent to adolescents based on sex and race/ethnicity.
青少年时期的物质使用是一个公共卫生问题,因为它会带来相关的身体和行为健康后果。在同时使用多种物质的人群中,这些后果会更加严重。尽管在单一物质使用方面已观察到性别和种族/族裔差异,但目前的文献对于同时使用物质的流行率是否存在差异尚无定论。本研究使用了2011 - 2014年全国药物使用和健康调查的数据,按性别和种族/族裔对12 - 18岁的青少年当前使用者中酒精、大麻和香烟的使用类型(单一和同时使用模式)进行了研究。参与者包括14,667名白人、西班牙裔、非裔美国人、亚裔和美国原住民青少年。最常见的类型是仅使用酒精,其次是同时使用酒精和大麻。加权患病率估计表明,青少年女性更有可能只是当前的酒精使用者,而青少年男性更有可能属于所有其他类型。与白人相比,种族/族裔少数群体中仅使用大麻的比例更高,并且作为同时使用者的可能性通常低于或等于白人。一个例外是非洲裔美国青少年,他们比白人青少年更有可能同时使用酒精和大麻。结果表明,同时使用物质在美国青少年中很常见,占过去一个月使用情况的40%以上,但使用类型因性别和种族/族裔而异。预防性干预措施应考虑所有使用类型,而不仅仅是单一物质暴露,并根据性别和种族/族裔解决与青少年最相关的使用模式。