Disentangling the Contexts of Adolescent Substance Use: An Examination of Gender Differences

Q3 Social Sciences
S. Blair, Sha Luo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Previous studies of adolescent substance use have noted how adolescent substance use is influenced by both protective and risk factors. Additionally, researchers have also noted the gradual convergence of female and male substance use, resulting in similar substance use patterns across the two. Using data from a nationally representative sample of high school seniors, this study examines the distinct effects of contextual factors upon the substance use by adolescent females and males. While both girls and boys do report similar patterns of substance use, the analyses demonstrate that peer, family, school, and work contexts affect females’ and males’ substance use in different manners. While peers readily affect drinking behaviors of each sex, peer influence yields significant associations with females’ vaping, but not males’. Among males, family contextual factors are associated with both vaping and marijuana use, while females’ vaping and marijuana use are more substantially affected by school and work contexts. The findings of this study, along with the implications thereof, are framed within the ecodevelopmental perspective.
解读青少年使用药物的背景:研究性别差异
以往对青少年药物使用的研究已经注意到青少年药物使用如何受到保护因素和风险因素的影响。此外,研究人员还注意到女性和男性使用药物的情况逐渐趋同,导致两者使用药物的模式相似。本研究利用具有全国代表性的高三学生样本数据,研究了环境因素对青少年男女使用药物的不同影响。虽然女孩和男孩使用药物的模式相似,但分析表明,同伴、家庭、学校和工作环境对女性和男性使用药物的影响是不同的。虽然同龄人很容易影响男女生的饮酒行为,但同龄人的影响与女性吸食电子烟有显著关联,而与男性吸食电子烟没有关联。在男性中,家庭环境因素与吸食毒品和吸食大麻有关,而女性吸食毒品和吸食大麻则更多地受到学校和工作环境的影响。本研究的结果及其影响均以生态发展的视角为框架。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Criminology and Sociology
International Journal of Criminology and Sociology Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
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