| Literature DB >> 34110528 |
Rene Carbonneau1,2,3, Frank Vitaro4,5,6, Mara Brendgen4,5,7, Richard E Tremblay8,4,5,9,10.
Abstract
This study examined developmental patterns of co-occurrent alcohol, marijuana, and other illicit drugs use during adolescence and the associated preadolescent risk factors in a longitudinal sample of 926 boys from low-socioeconomic, urban neighborhoods. Latent growth mixture modeling revealed six developmental patterns: non-/low-alcohol and non-illicit drug users (61% sample) and five polysubstance user-groups varying in severity based on onset, frequency and type of substances used. In comparisons with non-/low-users, several preadolescent risk factors were associated with increasing severity of polysubstance use. Higher sensation-seeking and lower anxiety were associated with all user-groups. Low self-esteem and family-related risk factors differentiated all user-groups from later-onset users. Higher impulsivity and school problems characterized early-onset and frequent polysubstance users. Impulsive sensation-seekers with lower anxiety and self-esteem cumulated a larger number and higher severity of risk factors and were at risk of early-onset frequent polysubstance use, emphasising the importance of indicated prevention for these high-risk boys.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescence; Developmental patterns; Polysubstance use; Preadolescent risk factors; Trajectories
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34110528 DOI: 10.1007/s10578-021-01202-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Psychiatry Hum Dev ISSN: 0009-398X