Gender and racial/ethnic differences in patterns of adolescent alcohol use and associations with adolescent and adult illicit drug use

Citation

Khan, Maria R.; Cleland, Charles M.; Scheidell, Joy D.; & Berger, Amanda T. (2014). Gender and racial/ethnic differences in patterns of adolescent alcohol use and associations with adolescent and adult illicit drug use. The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse. vol. 40 (3) pp. 213-224

Abstract

Objectives: The study objective was to use latent class analyses (LCAs) to identify gender- and racial/ethnic-specific groups of adolescent alcohol users and associations between alcohol use group and adolescent and adulthood illicit drug use in a nationally-representative US sample. Methods: We used Wave I (1994–1995, adolescence) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health to conduct LCAs by gender and race/ethnicity and measure associations between class membership and Wave I and Wave III (2001–2002, young adulthood) drug use. Participants included white (n = 9548), African American (n = 4005) and Hispanic (n = 3184) participants. LCAs were based on quantity and frequency of adolescent alcohol use; physiological and social consequences of use; and peer use. Results: Males and females were characterized by different alcohol use typologies and consequences. Males in the highest severity class (i.e. drank both heavily and frequently) experienced disproportionate risk of alcohol-related consequences compared with abstainers and other alcohol-using groups. Females who drank heavily when drinking even if only occasionally, experienced high risk of alcohol-related consequences. Substantial proportions of males reported diverse alcohol-related problems, whereas females most commonly reported alcohol-related problems with dating and sexual experiences. Though levels of alcohol use and report of problems associated with use were higher among white versus minority populations, other racial/ethnic differences in patterns of alcohol use were minimal. Classification in any drinking class was a strong risk factor for adolescent and adulthood illicit drug use, with heavy drinkers at greatest risk of drug use. Conclusions: Gender-specific adolescent alcohol and substance use prevention programs are warranted.

URL

http://informahealthcare.com/doi/abs/10.3109/00952990.2014.892950

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse

Author(s)

Khan, Maria R.
Cleland, Charles M.
Scheidell, Joy D.
Berger, Amanda T.

Year Published

2014

Volume Number

40

Issue Number

3

Pages

213-224

DOI

10.3109/00952990.2014.892950

Reference ID

4930