Teen Pregnancy, Depression, and Substance Abuse: The Conditioning Effect of Deviant Peers

Citation

Walker, D. & Holtfreter, K. (2019). Teen Pregnancy, Depression, and Substance Abuse: The Conditioning Effect of Deviant Peers. Deviant Behavior. pp. 16

Abstract

General Strain Theory (GST) suggests that individuals who experience strain are pressured into criminal and deviant behavior. Consistent with GST, the current study assesses the relationship between strain in the form of teenage pregnancy and substance use behavior, specifically alcohol problems and marijuana use. In addition, deviant peer association is a robust predictor of criminal behavior, therefore, we also investigate the role of deviant peers in the coping process among females who experience teenage pregnancy. Data for the analysis were obtained from Waves I and II of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescents to Adult Health (Add Health). In a sample of 5,236 adolescent females drawn from Waves I and II, results show that teenage pregnancy is a significant predictor of depression and substance use involvement. Furthermore, a 3-way-interaction effect was observed, specifically teenage pregnancy, association with deviant peers, and depression was a significant predictor of substance use behaviors. Implications for theory, research, and social programs for teen parents are discussed.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1080/01639625.2019.1666610

Keyword(s)

general strain theory

Notes

ISI Document Delivery No.: JA6LL Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 66 Walker, D'Andre Holtfreter, Kristy 0 Taylor & francis inc Philadelphia 1521-0456

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Deviant Behavior

Author(s)

Walker, D.
Holtfreter, K.

Year Published

2019

Pages

16

DOI

10.1080/01639625.2019.1666610

Reference ID

6573