Although there is a vast
literature on drug use and addiction, there is little work that addresses the
long-term use of drugs within the general population.
We take a more contextual
look in examining longitudinal drug use patterns over the course of
14 years for a representative sample of young adults in their late teens
and early twenties in the United States using the National Longitudinal Survey
of Youth (NLSY). We use a growth trajectory modelling approach for cocaine and
marijuana users to determine general use careers.
Using contextual and
life-course variables, we then estimate a multinomial logistic regression model
to predict group membership. In addition to establishing general use career
groups, we ask how well mainstream theories comport with our findings and how
the different chemical makeup of cocaine and marijuana influence our findings.
We find four general use career groups:
- high use/late desistance;
- peaked use/strong desistance;
- low use; and
- stable use/gradual desistance.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/t9uNsO
By: Roussell A1, Omori M2.
- 1Department of Criminal Justice & Criminology, Washington State University, Pullman, USA.
- 2Department of Sociology, University of Miami, USA.
- Sociol Health Illn. 2016 Apr 1. doi: 10.1111/1467-9566.12421.
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