Profiles of Contextual Risk at Birth and Adolescent Substance Use
File(s)Profiles of Contextual Risk.docx (65.88 KB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
This study examined whether there are subgroups of families with distinct profiles of prenatal/birth contextual risk, and whether subgroup membership was differentially related to adolescent substance use. Data from the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 were used. A five-class model provided the most meaningful solution. Large Family Size (7.72%) and Low Risk (69.69%) groups had the lowest levels of alcohol, cigarette, and illegal drug use. Similar high levels for each of the three substance-related outcomes were found for Parent Substance Misuse (11.20%), Maternal School Dropout (4.66%), and Socioeconomic Disadvantage (6.72%) groups. Maternal smoking and drinking while pregnant and paternal heavy alcohol use were found to be key prenatal risk factors that tended to cluster together and co-occur with other prenatal risk factors differently for different subgroups of youth.
Date Issued
2018-03-01
Date Acceptance
2017-11-01
Citation
JOURNAL OF CHILD AND FAMILY STUDIES, 2018, 27 (3), pp.717-724
ISSN
1062-1024
Publisher
SPRINGER
Start Page
717
End Page
724
Journal / Book Title
JOURNAL OF CHILD AND FAMILY STUDIES
Volume
27
Issue
3
Copyright Statement
© 2017 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC. The final publication is available at https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10826-017-0935-x
Identifier
http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000426297700005&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=1ba7043ffcc86c417c072aa74d649202
Subjects
Social Sciences
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Family Studies
Psychology, Developmental
Psychiatry
Psychology
Contextual risk
Adolescent substance use
Birth cohort
Person-centered
Latent class analysis
PERSON-CENTERED APPROACH
FINNISH PERINATAL HEALTH
LATENT CLASS ANALYSIS
SOCIOECONOMIC DIFFERENCES
MULTIPLE RISKS
UNITED-STATES
CHILDHOOD
PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
FAMILY
EVENTS
Publication Status
Published
Date Publish Online
2017-11-17