Adolescents’ Substance Use Initiation and Transitions Across Alcohol, Tobacco, and Illicit Drugs: A Survival Analysis Approach

Author:

Zhang Saijun1ORCID,Marsiglia Flavio F.2,Zhang Yunxi3

Affiliation:

1. PhD, MSW, associate professor, The University of Mississippi, University, USA

2. PhD, MSW, regents professor, director (Global Center for Applied Health Research), and PI (U54 Specialized Center at the Southwest Interdisciplinary Research Center), Arizona State University, Phoenix, USA

3. PhD, assistant professor, The University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, USA

Abstract

This study investigated the patterns of substance use initiation and transition across tobacco, alcohol, and illicit drugs over time using retrospective longitudinal data. Based on national data of 18,861 adolescents aged 14 to 17 years who had engaged in substance use, the findings revealed that nearly 50% of these adolescents initiated substance use with alcohol, 18% with tobacco, and 33% with illicit drugs. By the end of the second year, the probability of these adolescents trying a new substance class was 40% to 50%, rising to 80% to 90% by the eighth year. Adolescents who initiated with tobacco or illicit drugs exhibited a higher risk of transition. The study indicates the significant role of all substance classes in initiating adolescent substance use and highlights the rapidity of transitioning to new substance classes, underscoring the importance of proactive prevention and intervention strategies.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference46 articles.

1. Prioritizing Alcohol Prevention: Establishing Alcohol as the Gateway Drug and Linking Age of First Drink With Illicit Drug Use

2. Adolescent illicit drug use and subsequent academic and psychosocial adjustment: An examination of socially-mediated pathways

3. In-transition culture of experimentation with cannabis in Latin American college students: A new role within a potential drug use sequencing pattern

4. Center for Behavioral Health Statistics and Quality. (2020). Key substance use and mental health indicators in the United States: Results from the 2019 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. https://www.samhsa.gov/data/report/2019-nsduh-annual-national-report

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