Author:
BROOK JUDITH S.,KESSLER RONALD C.,COHEN PATRICIA
Abstract
Although it is well documented that intrapersonal and interpersonal risk factors are related to
the frequency of marijuana use, much less is known about the initiation of marijuana use. This
paper reports on a longitudinal study of the personality, family, peer, and ecological predictors of
marijuana onset. Survival analysis was applied to a sample of nonusers of illegal drugs, followed
from age 9 years to the 20s. The major findings indicate that (a) youngsters who are
unconventional are at a higher risk for marijuana initiation; (b) youngsters who associate with
peers who use marijuana or who smoke tobacco themselves are at increased risk for marijuana
initiation; (c) youngsters who identify with their parents are less likely to begin marijuana use;
and (d) the predictors related to marijuana onset emerged during preadolescence, early
adolescence, middle adolescence, late adolescence, and the 20s. Results are discussed within the
framework of a family interactional perspective of development. Implications for prevention are
discussed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
71 articles.
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