The accurate identification of risk factors is central to the development of effective efforts to prevent young people from using alcohol, tobacco and other substances. To date, a key limitation of the prevention literature has been the paucity of research that examines the extent to which substance use risk factors identified in studies of white adolescents generalize to African American (and other non-white) youth. In the absence of research on race differences in risk factor exposure and vulnerability, current preventive interventions are based on the implicit assumptions that 1) the risk factors for African American and white adolescents' substance use are identical; and 2) that African American and white adolescents are equally exposed...
African American adolescents have traditionally engaged in drug use at disproportionately lower rate...
The purpose of this study was to develop and apply an integrated theoretical model of substance use ...
African American youth are less likely to use alcohol than their European American counterparts; how...
Substance use among all youth is a substantial public health concern and must be understood from spe...
Current adolescent substance use risk models have inadequately predicted use for African Americans, ...
The present study uses large nationally representative samples and integrates existing sociological ...
Most substance-use prevention interventions are based on the implicit assumption that risk and prote...
Introduction Alcohol expectancies are important determinants and predictors of adolescent alcohol...
Introduction: African American adolescents have a higher prevalence of risky sexual behavior compare...
Impoverished African American adolescents comprise a subgroup of individuals who are at a uniquely i...
Theoretical models suggest that many diverse psychosocial factors contribute to the etiology of subs...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on August 23, 2010).The entir...
Current adolescent substance use risk models have inadequately predicted use for African Americans, ...
Externalizing Behavior Predicts Differential Patterns of Substance Use among Adolescents by Race Ear...
The purpose of this investigation was to test whether the gateway hypothesis of drug initiation sequ...
African American adolescents have traditionally engaged in drug use at disproportionately lower rate...
The purpose of this study was to develop and apply an integrated theoretical model of substance use ...
African American youth are less likely to use alcohol than their European American counterparts; how...
Substance use among all youth is a substantial public health concern and must be understood from spe...
Current adolescent substance use risk models have inadequately predicted use for African Americans, ...
The present study uses large nationally representative samples and integrates existing sociological ...
Most substance-use prevention interventions are based on the implicit assumption that risk and prote...
Introduction Alcohol expectancies are important determinants and predictors of adolescent alcohol...
Introduction: African American adolescents have a higher prevalence of risky sexual behavior compare...
Impoverished African American adolescents comprise a subgroup of individuals who are at a uniquely i...
Theoretical models suggest that many diverse psychosocial factors contribute to the etiology of subs...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on August 23, 2010).The entir...
Current adolescent substance use risk models have inadequately predicted use for African Americans, ...
Externalizing Behavior Predicts Differential Patterns of Substance Use among Adolescents by Race Ear...
The purpose of this investigation was to test whether the gateway hypothesis of drug initiation sequ...
African American adolescents have traditionally engaged in drug use at disproportionately lower rate...
The purpose of this study was to develop and apply an integrated theoretical model of substance use ...
African American youth are less likely to use alcohol than their European American counterparts; how...