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Problem drinking and the dimension of involvement with drugs: A Guttman scalogram analysis of adolescent drug use

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  • Donovan, J.E.
  • Jessor, R.

Abstract

Analyses of data from two nationwide surveys of high school students, one carried out in 1974 and the other in 1978, suggest that problem drinking may be seen as yet another step along an underlying dimension of involvement with both licit and illicit drugs. The dimension of involvement with drugs consists of the following levels: nonuse of alcohol or illicit drugs; nonproblem use of alcohol; marijuana use; problem drinking; use of pills (amphetamines, barbiturates, hallucinogenic drugs); and the use of 'hard drugs' such as cocaine or heroin. The dimension possesses excellent Guttman-scale properties in both national samples as well as in the subsamples differing in gender and ethnic backgrounds. The ordering of the levels of involvement was confirmed by the ordering of the alcohol-drug involvement groups based on their mean scores on measures of psychosocial proneness for involvement in problem behavior. The excessive use of a licit drug, i.e., problem drinking, appears to indicate greater involvement in drug use than does the use of an illicit drug, marijuana. This finding points to the importance of distinguishing between use and problem use of drugs in efforts to understand adolescent drug involvement.

Suggested Citation

  • Donovan, J.E. & Jessor, R., 1983. "Problem drinking and the dimension of involvement with drugs: A Guttman scalogram analysis of adolescent drug use," American Journal of Public Health, American Public Health Association, vol. 73(5), pages 543-552.
  • Handle: RePEc:aph:ajpbhl:1983:73:5:543-552_0
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