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Risk profiles among adolescent nonmedical opioid users in the United States.
Abstract
Although prior research has provided data on nonmedical use of opioids in adolescents,
studies examining the heterogeneity of risk are limited. The present study extends
prior research by deepening the understanding of adolescent nonmedical opioid use
by specifying empirically meaningful profiles of risk. Using data on adolescent non-medical
opioid users (N=1783) from the 2008 US National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH),
latent class analysis and multinomial logistic regression were employed to identify
latent classes and determine the effects of covariates on class membership. Four latent
classes provided the best fit to the data. Classes consisted of a low risk class (33.7%),
a high delinquency/low substance use class (17.8%), a high substance use/low delinquency
class (34.2%), and finally a high risk class (14.3%) characterized by high levels
of both substance use and delinquent behavior. Study findings advance the understanding
of adolescent nonmedical opioid use by specifying distinct latent classes. Results
suggest that intervention efforts can fruitfully target a number of risk domains especially
programs that enhance effective parenting and supervision.
Type
Journal articleSubject
HumansOpioid-Related Disorders
Risk
Risk Factors
Cross-Sectional Studies
Adolescent Behavior
Adolescent
United States
Female
Male
Self Report
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/19961Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/j.addbeh.2012.03.015Publication Info
Vaughn, Michael G; Fu, Qiang; Perron, Brian E; & Wu, Li-Tzy (2012). Risk profiles among adolescent nonmedical opioid users in the United States. Addictive behaviors, 37(8). pp. 974-977. 10.1016/j.addbeh.2012.03.015. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/19961.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Li-Tzy Wu
Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Education/Training: Pre- and post-doctoral training in mental health service research,
psychiatric epidemiology (NIMH T32), and addiction epidemiology (NIDA T32) from Johns
Hopkins University School of Public Health (Maryland); Fellow of the NIH Summer Institute
on the Design and Conduct of Randomized Clinical Trials.Director: Duke Community Based
Substance Use Disorder Research Program.Research interests: COVID-19, Opioid misuse,
Opioid overdose, Opioid use disorder

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