Who is Offering and How Often?: Gender Differences in Drug Offers Among American Indian Adolescents of the Southwest.

Andrea Dixon Rayle, Stephen Kulis, Scott K Okamoto, Sheila S Tann, Craig Winston Lecroy, Patricia Dustman, Aimee M Burke
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Abstract

This exploratory study examines gender differences in the patterns of drug offers among a sample of 71 American Indian middle school students. Participants respond to an inventory of drug-related problem situations specific to the cultural contexts of Southwestern American Indian youth. They are asked to consider the frequency of drug offers from specific groups in their social networks and the difficulty associated with refusing drugs from various offerers. The results indicate that female and male American Indian youth differ in the degree of exposure to drug offers and the degree of perceived difficulty in handling such offers. Even after controlling for differences in age, grade level, socioeconomic status, family structure, and residence on a reservation, girls report significantly more drug offers than boys from friends, cousins, and other peers. Compared to boys, girls also report a significantly higher sense of difficulty in dealing with drug offers from all sources.

谁提供,多久提供一次?西南地区美国印第安青少年药物供应的性别差异。
本研究以71名美国印地安中学生为样本,探讨药物提供模式的性别差异。参与者对美国西南部印第安青年的文化背景下特有的与毒品有关的问题情况的清单作出反应。他们被要求考虑其社会网络中特定群体提供药物的频率,以及拒绝各种提供者提供药物的难度。结果表明,女性和男性美国印第安青年在接触毒品的程度和处理毒品的困难程度上存在差异。即使在控制了年龄、年级水平、社会经济地位、家庭结构和居留地的差异之后,女孩报告的毒品供应明显多于男孩来自朋友、表亲和其他同龄人。与男孩相比,女孩还报告在处理来自所有来源的毒品供应方面有明显更高的困难感。
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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