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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Racial/Ethnic differences in smoking, drinking, and illicit drug use among American high school seniors, 1976-89.

TLDR
Multivariate analyses indicate that subgroup differences in high school seniors' drug use are not primarily attributable to family composition, parents' education, region, or urban-rural distinctions, and relatively low levels of drug use by most non-White youth.
Abstract
BACKGROUND. This paper reports racial/ethnic differences in the use of licit and illicit drugs by high school seniors in the United States. METHODS. The study uses questionnaire data from annual, nationally representative surveys of seniors from 1976 through 1989. Combined sample sizes were 57,620 for 1976-79; 75,772 for 1980-84; and 73,527 for 1985-89. RESULTS. Native American had the highest prevalence rates for cigarettes, alcohol, and most illicit drugs; White students had the next highest rates for most drugs. Asian Americans had the lowest prevalence rates, and Black students had levels nearly as low except for marijuana. Prevalence rates for the Hispanic groups were mostly in the intermediate ranges except for relatively high cocaine use among the males. Trend patterns for most forms of drug use were similar across subgroups, although cigarette use declined more sharply for Black than White seniors, resulting in greater Black-White differences in recent years. CONCLUSIONS. This study, other school-...

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Gender differences in risk taking: A meta-analysis.

TL;DR: This paper conducted a meta-analysis of 150 studies in which the risk-taking tendencies of male and female participants were compared and found that the average effects for 14 out of 16 types of risk taking were significantly larger than 0 (indicating greater risk taking in male participants).
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Psychosocial factors related to adolescent smoking: a critical review of the literature

TL;DR: The analysis of psychosocial risk factors for smoking presented in the United States surgeon general’s 1994 report on smoking and health is extended and a theoretical frame of reference for understanding the development of smoking is proposed.
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Correlates of college student binge drinking

TL;DR: While demographic factors such as sex and race were significantly related to binge drinking, prior binging in high school was crucial, suggesting that for many students, binge drinking begins before college.
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The effects of race/ethnicity, income, and family structure on adolescent risk behaviors.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that when taken together, race/ethnicity, income, and family structure provide only limited understanding of adolescent risk behaviors.
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Acculturation, familism, and alcohol use among Latino adolescent males: Longitudinal relations

TL;DR: This paper explored the effects of acculturation and acculturative stress on the intensity of alcohol use among immigrant (n = 1,051) and U.S.-born (n= 968) Latino males attending middle school in South Florida.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Reliability and consistency in self-reports of drug use.

TL;DR: The reliability and stability of self-reports of licit and illicit drug use are estimated using longitudinal data, and found to be rather high, although there appears to be a tendency for discrepant reporting of marijuana and alcohol use to be correlated within time.
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Patterns and predictors of alcohol use among 7-12th grade students in New York State.

TL;DR: The heavy drinking student can be characterized by frequent school misconduct, first becoming drunk at an early age, having a greater number of friends who get drunk weekly, parental approval of drinking, poor grades in school, being an older adolescent, and being male and White.
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Underreporting of substance use in a national longitudinal youth cohort individual and interviewer effects

TL;DR: This article explored the quality of drug data in the 1984 wave of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth and found that underreporting of use of illicit drugs other than marijuana appears to have taken place, and that light users of these drugs are underrepresented among the self-acknowledged users.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smoking, drinking, and drug use among American high school students: correlates and trends, 1975-1979.

TL;DR: The findings suggest that the kinds of young people most at risk remain much the same, while the types and amounts of substances they use shift somewhat from year to year.
Journal ArticleDOI

Substance abuse and psychosocial risk factors among teenagers: associations with sex, age, ethnicity, and type of school

TL;DR: Differential exposure to and impact of risk factors on drug-taking behaviors were tested for differences by sex, age, ethnicity, and type of school attending and can partially account for the status-group differences in drug use.
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