Do Incest, Depression, Parental Drinking, Serious Romantic Relationships, and Living with Parents Influence Patterns of Substance Use During Emerging Adulthood?

Citation

Snyder, Susan M. & Rubenstein, Casey (2014). Do Incest, Depression, Parental Drinking, Serious Romantic Relationships, and Living with Parents Influence Patterns of Substance Use During Emerging Adulthood?. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs. vol. 46 (3) pp. 188-197

Abstract

This study examined how incest, depression, parental drinking, relationship status, and living with parents affect patterns of substance use among emerging adults, 18 to 25 years old. The study sample included (n = 11,546) individuals who participated in Waves I, II, and III of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health). The study used separate latent class analysis for males and females to determine how patterns of substance use clustered together. The study identified the following three classes of substance use: heavy, moderate, and normative substance use patterns. Multinomial logistic regression indicated that, for females only, incest histories also nearly doubled the risk of heavy-use class membership. In addition, experiencing depression, being single, and not living with parents serve as risk factors for males and females in the heavy-use group. Conversely, being Black, Hispanic, or living with parents lowered the likelihood of being in the group with the most substance use behaviors (i.e., heavy use). Findings highlight the need for interventions that target depression and female survivors of incest among emerging adults.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02791072.2014.914610

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Journal of Psychoactive Drugs

Author(s)

Snyder, Susan M.
Rubenstein, Casey

Year Published

2014

Volume Number

46

Issue Number

3

Pages

188-197

DOI

10.1080/02791072.2014.914610

Reference ID

5042