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Ttofi, Maria M.; Farrington, David P.; Lösel, Friedrich; Crago, Rebecca V.; Theodorakis, Nikolaos – School Psychology Quarterly, 2016
The main aim of this article is to investigate whether there is a significant long-term association between bullying at school and drug use later in life. A meta-analysis is presented based on results from major prospective longitudinal studies with available unadjusted and adjusted effect sizes. Results are based on thorough systematic searches…
Descriptors: Bullying, Drug Use, Meta Analysis, Longitudinal Studies
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Huang, David Y. C.; Evans, Elizabeth; Hara, Motoaki; Weiss, Robert E.; Hser, Yih-Ing – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2011
This study investigated the impact of drug use on employment over 20 years among men and women, utilizing data on 7661 participants in the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. Growth mixture modeling was applied, and five distinct employment trajectory groups were identified for both men and women. The identified patterns were largely similar…
Descriptors: Drug Use, Gender Differences, Employment, Marriage
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Shillington, Audrey M.; Clapp, John D.; Reed, Mark B. – Journal of Child & Adolescent Substance Abuse, 2011
This study examined teen marijuana report stability over 8 years. The stability of self-reports refers to the consistency of self-reported use across several years. This study used fives waves of data across 8 years from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. Analyses were conducted to examine the internal or within-wave consistency as well as…
Descriptors: Marijuana, Drug Use, Adolescents, Measurement Techniques
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Leech, Tamara G. J. – Youth & Society, 2012
This study examines the separate relationships of public housing residence and subsidized housing residence to adolescent health risk behavior. Data include 2,530 adolescents aged 14 to 19 who were children of the National the Longitudinal Study of Youth. The author used stratified propensity methods to compare the behaviors of each…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Marijuana, Drug Use, Drinking
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Malone, Patrick S.; Lamis, Dorian A.; Masyn, Katherine E.; Northrup, Thomas F. – Multivariate Behavioral Research, 2010
The gateway drug model is a popular conceptualization of a progression most substance users are hypothesized to follow as they try different legal and illegal drugs. Most forms of the gateway hypothesis are that "softer" drugs lead to "harder," illicit drugs. However, the gateway hypothesis has been notably difficult to…
Descriptors: Drug Use, Models, Statistical Analysis, Computer Software
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Miech, Richard – Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 2008
Despite the substantial and prolonged sociological interest in health disparities, much remains unknown about the processes that initiate them. To investigate this topic, we focus on the case study of cocaine use, for which a socioeconomic disparity emerged across all age groups in a short period of time around 1990. We examine whether the…
Descriptors: Cocaine, Socioeconomic Status, Case Studies, Regression (Statistics)
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Cubbins, Lisa A.; Klepinger, Daniel H. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2007
Using multiply imputed data from 5 waves of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (N = 8,294), we investigated whether childhood family characteristics and childhood religious affiliation explain ethnic differences in marijuana and cocaine use in the last year. None of the childhood factors explained ethnic differences in drug use, though…
Descriptors: Family Characteristics, Religious Cultural Groups, Ethnicity, Children
Johnson, Byron R. – 2000
Using a review of the literature and national longitudinal data on 1,087 youth aged 11 to 17, this study investigated whether religious commitment reduces drug use among poor urban teenagers. Standard multivariate statistical analysis of data from the National Youth Survey (1997) showed that inner-city adolescents who were more religious were…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Church Role, Drug Use, Longitudinal Studies
Schildhaus, Sam; Shaw-Taylor, Yoku; Pedlow, Steven; Pergamit, Michael R. – Office of National Drug Control Policy, 2004
The primary aim of this study was to describe the movement of adolescents and young adults into and out of drug use and to predict heavy drug use. The data source is the Department of Labor's National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, which began in 1979 with a sample of 12,686 adolescents aged 14-21. After 17 rounds and 19 years, the response rate in…
Descriptors: Drug Use, Young Adults, Adolescents, Longitudinal Studies
Hotchkiss, Lawrence – 1987
A project examined the nonecomomic effects of secondary vocational education on six types of outcomes measured while respondents were in high school (basic skills, career expectations, significant others' career expectations for the student, attitudes such as self-esteem and locus of control, grades, and homework), and five types of post-high…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Aspiration, Basic Skills, Drug Use