During the past decade the prevalence of ecstasy use has increased in the U.S. and in other countries. particularly among adolescents and young adults. Potential determinants that predict future ecstasy use in adolescence are understudied. Specifically, there is a lack of longitudinal research designed to control temporal sequencing and estimate the extent to which factors predict increased risk of ecstasy use. To address these gaps, the proposed study aims to: 1) test if the prevalence and incidence of ecstasy use in adolescence vary in relation to demographic and geographic variables over time; 2) test whether previous deviant behaviors, previous high sensation-seeking scores and prior other drug use predict subsequent ecstasy use among adolescents; 3) test whether previous low levels of parent monitoring and high levels of peer ecstasy use predict subsequent ecstasy use among adolescents; 4) test for changes in attitudes and beliefs towards ecstasy use among adolescents and test whether exposure to an anti-drug media campaign might have influenced adolescents' attitudes towards ecstasy use. Longitudinal data from the National Survey of Parents and Youth (NSPY), an epidemiologic study representative of the adolescent U.S. population (9-18 yeas old) will be used to address these aims. After initial exploratory data analyses, we will analyze data through cross-sectional and longitudinal logistic regression models to address each of the specific aims. First, we will estimate associations of prevalence and incidence of ecstasy use with demographics (age, gender, race/ethnicity), then, we will use alternating logistic regression to test whether there is evidence of clustering of adolescent ecstasy use by region of the country. Using longitudinal regression marginal models, we will test whether previous deviant behaviors, high sensation-seeking scores and high levels of prior other drug use predict subsequent ecstasy use among adolescents, as well as examine if lower levels of parent monitoring and high levels of peer ecstasy use predict subsequent ecstasy use among adolescents. Logistic regression models will test for changes in attitudes and beliefs towards ecstasy use among adolescents and to test whether exposure to an anti-drug media campaign influenced adolescents' attitudes towards ecstasy use. Finally, we believe that our study will bring public health contributions to better understand potential determinants of ecstasy use. ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Small Research Grants (R03)
Project #
5R03DA020923-02
Application #
7126501
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDA1-MXS-M (20))
Program Officer
Lopez, Marsha
Project Start
2005-09-30
Project End
2008-06-30
Budget Start
2006-07-01
Budget End
2008-06-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$79,829
Indirect Cost
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Other Health Professions
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
001910777
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21218
Martins, Silvia S; Gorelick, David A (2011) Conditional substance abuse and dependence by diagnosis of mood or anxiety disorder or schizophrenia in the U.S. population. Drug Alcohol Depend 119:28-36
Kuramoto, S Janet; Martins, Silvia S; Ko, Jean Y et al. (2011) Past year treatment status and alcohol abuse symptoms among US adults with alcohol dependence. Addict Behav 36:648-53
Alexandre, Pierre K; Younis, Mustafa Z; Martins, Silvia S et al. (2010) Disparities in adequate mental health care for past-year major depressive episodes among white and non-white youth. J Health Care Finance 36:57-72
Ko, Jean Y; Martins, Silvia S; Kuramoto, S Janet et al. (2010) Patterns of alcohol-dependence symptoms using a latent empirical approach: associations with treatment usage and other correlates. J Stud Alcohol Drugs 71:870-8
Alexandre, Pierre Kébreau; Patrick, Richard; Beauliere, Arnousse et al. (2009) Race differentials in employment effects of psychological distress: A study of non-Hispanic Whites and African-Americans in the United States. Soc Sci J 46:201-210
Martins, Silvia S; Alexandre, Pierre K (2009) The association of ecstasy use and academic achievement among adolescents in two U.S. national surveys. Addict Behav 34:9-16
Alexandre, Pierre K; Martins, Silvia S; Richard, Patrick (2009) Disparities in adequate mental health care for past-year major depressive episodes among Caucasian and Hispanic youths. Psychiatr Serv 60:1365-71
Martins, Silvia S; Storr, Carla L; Alexandre, Pierre K et al. (2008) Adolescent ecstasy and other drug use in the National Survey of Parents and Youth: the role of sensation-seeking, parental monitoring and peer's drug use. Addict Behav 33:919-33
Keyes, Katherine M; Martins, Silvia S; Hasin, Deborah S (2008) Past 12-month and lifetime comorbidity and poly-drug use of ecstasy users among young adults in the United States: results from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions. Drug Alcohol Depend 97:139-49
Martins, Silvia S; Storr, Carla L; Alexandre, Pierre K et al. (2008) Do adolescent ecstasy users have different attitudes towards drugs when compared to marijuana users? Drug Alcohol Depend 94:63-72

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