Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Rm 2025, 200 N. Wolfe St., David M. Rubenstein Child Health Building, Baltimore, 21287, MD, USA.
Dornsife School of Public Health, Urban Health Collaborative, Drexel University, 3600 Market St, 7th Floor, PA, 19104, Philadelphia, USA.
Prev Sci. 2023 May;24(4):676-687. doi: 10.1007/s11121-023-01536-y. Epub 2023 Apr 28.
A large body of research has identified peer exposure as a key factor driving adolescent substance use. However, findings on the role of sex partners are less robust and mixed. This study aims to fill this gap by examining the independent contribution of close friends' and sex partners' alcohol and marijuana use on adolescents' use of these substances. A secondary data analysis of social network data collected in 2000-2002 from a household sample of African American youth (14-19 years old) in the Bayview and Hunter's Point neighborhoods of San Francisco was conducted. Index participants and their nominated close friends and romantic sex partners (N = 104 triads) self-reported recent alcohol and marijuana use (defined as any use in the past 3 months). Generalized estimated equations were used to estimate the independent association between adolescent's recent substance use and their friend's and sex partner's use. Adolescents with a marijuana-using romantic sex partner had a nearly six-fold higher odds of using marijuana compared to adolescents with a non-using partner, controlling for close friend's marijuana use and other confounders [OR:5.69, 95%CI: 1.94, 16.7]; no association with close friend's marijuana use was found. A similar pattern was observed for alcohol use. Adolescents with an alcohol-using romantic sex partner had increased odds of using alcohol compared to adolescents with a non-using partner, controlling for close friend's alcohol use and other confounders [OR:2.40, 95%CI: 1.02, 5.63]; no association with close friend's alcohol use was found. Romantic sex partners may play a unique and significant role in adolescent substance use. Peer-focused interventions may be more effective if they consider romantic sex partners. Future research should consider the role of romantic sex partners in changing social context related to substance use from adolescence to young adulthood.
大量研究已经确定同伴接触是推动青少年使用物质的关键因素。然而,关于性伴侣作用的发现则不太可靠且存在差异。本研究旨在通过检查亲密朋友和性伴侣的酒精和大麻使用对青少年使用这些物质的独立贡献来填补这一空白。对 2000-2002 年从旧金山湾景和亨特角街区的一个家庭抽样的非洲裔美国青年(14-19 岁)收集的社交网络数据进行了二次数据分析。索引参与者及其提名的亲密朋友和浪漫的性伴侣(N=104 个三人组)自我报告了最近的酒精和大麻使用情况(定义为过去 3 个月内的任何使用)。广义估计方程用于估计青少年最近物质使用与他们朋友和性伴侣使用之间的独立关联。与没有使用伴侣的青少年相比,与使用大麻的浪漫性伴侣的青少年使用大麻的几率几乎高出六倍,控制了亲密朋友的大麻使用和其他混杂因素[比值比:5.69,95%置信区间:1.94,16.7];与亲密朋友的大麻使用无关。对于酒精使用也观察到类似的模式。与没有使用伴侣的青少年相比,与使用酒精的浪漫性伴侣的青少年使用酒精的几率增加,控制了亲密朋友的酒精使用和其他混杂因素[比值比:2.40,95%置信区间:1.02,5.63];与亲密朋友的酒精使用无关。浪漫的性伴侣可能在青少年物质使用中发挥独特而重要的作用。如果同伴为重点的干预措施考虑到浪漫的性伴侣,可能会更有效。未来的研究应该考虑浪漫的性伴侣在从青春期到成年早期与物质使用相关的社会环境变化中的作用。