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Parental Influences on Adolescent Marijuana Use and the Baby Boom Generation |
CITATION:
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Office of Applied Studies (2001). Parental Influences on Adolescent Marijuana Use and the Baby Boom Generation: Findings from the 1979-1996 National Household Surveys on Drug Abuse (Analytic Series A-13, DHHS Publication No. SMA 01-3531). Rockville, MD.
Cover
Acknowledgments
List of Tables
List of Figures
List of Appendix Tables
List of Appendix Figures
Highlights
1. Introduction
1.1 Adolescent Use and Parental Influences
1.2 Aims of Report
1.3 Organization of Report
2. Exposure to the Marijuana Epidemic
2.1 A Basic Hypothesis
2.2 Definition of Exposure to the Marijuana Use Epidemic
2.3 Identification of Historical Incidence and Prevalence Periods
2.4 Identification of Ages at Risk For Initiation of Marijuana Use
2.5 Cohort-Specific Exposure to Different Periods of the Epidemic
3. NHSDA Methodology
3.1 Sample Design
3.2 Sampling of DYADS
3.3 NHSDA Parent-Child DYADS: DYAD Identification and Overview
3.4 DYAD Level Weights
3.5 Changes in Interview Format in 1994
3.6 Advantages and Disadvantages of the NHSDA
3.7 Measurement of Variables
4. Sociodemographic Characteristics of Parent-Child DYADS
4.1 Age
4.2 Sex
4.3 Ethnicity
4.4 Education
4.5 Marital Status
4.6 Household Income
4.7 DYAD and Non-DYAD Respondents Compared
5. Prevalence and Association of Marijuana Use Among Children and Parents
5.1 Prevalence of Marijuana Use Among Children and Parents
5.2 Association in Marijuana use Between Parents and Children
6. Parental Marijuana Use and Other Predictors of Marijuana Use Among Children
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Parental Exposure to the Marijuana Epidemic
6.3 Predictors of Marijuana Use
6.4 The Role of Attitudes Toward Marijuana
7. Conclusion
References
Technical Appendix: Construction of Drug Use and Other Variables
A.1 Drug Use Variables
This page was last updated on December 30, 2008. |
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