Adolescent alcohol use: use of social network analysis and cross-classified multilevel modeling to examine peer group, school, and neighborhood-level influences.

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse Pub Date : 2023-09-03 Epub Date: 2023-07-11 DOI:10.1080/00952990.2023.2222431
Kathryn M Barker, Sandra Brown, Eileen V Pitpitan, Holly Baker Shakya, Anita Raj
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Abstract

Background: Neighborhood-, school-, and peer-contexts play an important role in adolescent alcohol use behaviors. Methodological advances permit simultaneous modeling of these contexts to understand their relative and joint importance. Few empirical studies include these contexts, and studies that do typically: examine each context separately; include contexts for the sole purpose of accounting for clustering in the data; or do not disaggregate by sex.Objectives: This study takes an eco-epidemiologic approach to examine the role of socio-contextual contributions to variance in adolescent alcohol use. The primary parameters of interest are therefore variance rather than beta parameters (i.e. random rather than fixed effects). Sex-stratified models are also used to understand how each context may matter differently for male and female adolescents.Method: Data come from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (n = 8,534 females, n = 8,102 males). We conduct social network analysis and traditional and cross-classified multilevel models (CCMM) in the full and sex-disaggregated samples.Results: In final CCMM, peer groups, schools, and neighborhoods contributed 10.5%, 10.8%, and 0.4%, respectively, to total variation in adolescent alcohol use. Results do not differ widely by gender.Conclusions: Peer groups and schools emerge as more salient contributing contexts relative to neighborhoods in adolescent alcohol use for males and females. These findings have both methodological and practical implications. Multilevel modeling can model contexts simultaneously to prevent the overestimation of variance in youth alcohol use explained by each context. Primary prevention strategies addressing youth alcohol use should focus on schools and peer networks.

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青少年酒精使用:使用社会网络分析和交叉分类多层次模型来检查同伴群体、学校和社区水平的影响。
背景:邻里、学校和同伴环境在青少年酒精使用行为中起重要作用。方法上的进步允许同时对这些背景进行建模,以了解它们的相对和联合重要性。很少有实证研究包括这些背景,通常的研究是:分别检查每个背景;包含上下文,其唯一目的是为了说明数据中的聚类;或者不要按性别分类。目的:本研究采用生态流行病学方法来检验社会背景对青少年酒精使用差异的影响。因此,主要参数是方差而不是beta参数(即随机效应而不是固定效应)。性别分层模型也被用来理解每种环境对男性和女性青少年的影响是如何不同的。方法:数据来自国家青少年至成人健康纵向研究(n = 8,534名女性,n = 8,102名男性)。我们在完整和性别分类的样本中进行了社会网络分析和传统的交叉分类多层次模型(CCMM)。结果:在最终的CCMM中,同龄人群体、学校和社区分别对青少年酒精使用的总变异贡献了10.5%、10.8%和0.4%。结果在性别上差别不大。结论:相对于社区,同龄人群体和学校在青少年男性和女性饮酒方面发挥了更重要的作用。这些发现具有方法论和实践意义。多层建模可以同时对情境进行建模,以防止对每个情境解释的青少年酒精使用方差的高估。针对青少年饮酒问题的初级预防战略应侧重于学校和同伴网络。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
3.70%
发文量
68
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse (AJDAA) is an international journal published six times per year and provides an important and stimulating venue for the exchange of ideas between the researchers working in diverse areas, including public policy, epidemiology, neurobiology, and the treatment of addictive disorders. AJDAA includes a wide range of translational research, covering preclinical and clinical aspects of the field. AJDAA covers these topics with focused data presentations and authoritative reviews of timely developments in our field. Manuscripts exploring addictions other than substance use disorders are encouraged. Reviews and Perspectives of emerging fields are given priority consideration. Areas of particular interest include: public health policy; novel research methodologies; human and animal pharmacology; human translational studies, including neuroimaging; pharmacological and behavioral treatments; new modalities of care; molecular and family genetic studies; medicinal use of substances traditionally considered substances of abuse.
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