Profiles of contextual risk at birth and adolescent substance use

Abstract This study examined whether there are subgroups of families with distinct profiles of prenatal/birth contextual risk, and whether subgroup membership was differentially related to adolescent substance use. Data from the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 were used. A five-class model provid...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Parra, G. R. (Gilbert R.), Smith, G. L. (Gail L.), Mason, W. A. (W. Alex), Savolainen, J. (Jukka), Chmelka, M. B. (Mary B.), Miettunen, J. (Jouko), Järvelin, M.-R. (Marjo-Riitta), Moilanen, I. (Irma), Veijola, J. (Juha)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2017
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Online Access:http://urn.fi/urn:nbn:fi-fe2019051415552
Description
Summary:Abstract This study examined whether there are subgroups of families with distinct profiles of prenatal/birth contextual risk, and whether subgroup membership was differentially related to adolescent substance use. Data from the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 were used. A five-class model provided the most meaningful solution. Large Family Size (7.72%) and Low Risk (69.69%) groups had the lowest levels of alcohol, cigarette, and illegal drug use. Similar high levels for each of the three substance-related outcomes were found for Parent Substance Misuse (11.20%), Maternal School Dropout (4.66%), and Socioeconomic Disadvantage (6.72%) groups. Maternal smoking and drinking while pregnant and paternal heavy alcohol use were found to be key prenatal risk factors that tended to cluster together and co-occur with other prenatal risk factors differently for different subgroups of youth.