NCJ Number:
171356
Title:
Adolescents at Risk: Substance Abuse Among Miami's Adolescents in the 1990's
Author(s):
B M Yarnold
Date Published:
1997
Page Count:
268
Sponsoring Agency:
University Press of America Lanham, MD 20706
Publication Number:
ISBN 0-7618-0905-8
Sale Source:
University Press of America Marketing Director 4720 Boston Way Lanham, MD 20706 United States of America
Type:
Survey
Language:
English
Country:
United States of America
Annotation:
Data were collected from middle and senior high schools between 1989 and 1992 to assess cigarette, alcohol, steroid, marijuana, inhalant, LSD, cocaine, crack, heroin, and other drug use among Miami adolescents.
Abstract:
The sample consisted of students responding to surveys in randomly selected English classes in Dade County public schools. The racial/ethnic background of students was white non-Hispanic (14.4 percent), black non-Hispanic (30.7 percent), Hispanic (48.8 percent), and other (6.1 percent). The projected population for 76 classes included 2,005 students; 1,690 completed the surveys, for a response rate of 84 percent. Results showed over 42 percent of students had smoked cigarettes. Well over two-thirds of students reported using alcoholic beverages, but only 2 percent used steroids. Marijuana had been used by 16 percent of students, inhalants had been used by 15 percent of students, and 4 percent of students had experimented with LSD. Only 2 percent of students said they had experimented with crack, and about 3.5 percent claimed they had used cocaine. Peers played a major role in the socialization of students; adolescents who had peers who used drugs were significantly more likely to use drugs themselves. Females were somewhat less likely than males to use alcohol, inhalants, LSD, and heroin, although gender differences were not statistically significant. Whites seemed to use drugs at a higher rate than nonwhites. Findings suggest adolescent drug abusers are not engaging in rational cost-benefit analysis when making drug use decisions, adolescents have easy access to drugs, religion inhibits the use of some drugs, family-related factors have an indeterminate effect on adolescent drug use, and school-related factors play practically no role in constraining adolescents. Recommendations to prevent juvenile drug abuse are offered. 216 references and 10 tables
Main Term(s):
Juvenile drug abusers
Index Term(s):
Black/African Americans; Black/White Crime Comparisons; Caucasian/White Americans; Cocaine; Crack; Florida; Heroin; Hispanic Americans; Intoxicant inhalation; LSD (acid); Male female juvenile offender comparisons; Marijuana; Peer influences on behavior; Steroids; Students; Tobacco use; Underage Drinking
Note:
DCC
To cite this abstract, use the following link: http://www.ncjrs.gov/App/publications/abstract.aspx?ID=171356