Life‐style and substance use among male African American urban adolescents: A cluster analytic approach
- 1 February 1992
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Community Psychology
- Vol. 20 (1) , 121-138
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00942184
Abstract
Cluster analyzed four variables: school attendance, employment, church attendance, and delinquency, to develop life-style profiles. Data from 218 African-American urban adolescents were used in the study. Five meaningful clusters were retained and subjected to criterion validity analyses using measures of spirituality, participation in a voluntary organization, self-esteem, and friend's substance use. The five clusters were then compared on cigarette, alcohol, marijuana, and hard drug use. The results suggest that a life-style that includes an adaptive compensatory behavior component may be more adaptive than a life-style that does not include compensatory behavior. For example, youths who left high school before graduation but were involved in church reported less alcohol and substance use than youths who left school and were not involved in any meaningful instrumental activity. Implications for intervention and future research on high-risk behaviors are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- High School Dropouts, Labor Market Success, and Criminal BehaviorYouth & Society, 1989
- Ten-Year Trends in At-Risk BehaviorsJournal of Adolescent Research, 1989
- A longitudinal study of the effects of employment and unemployment on school‐leaversJournal of Occupational Psychology, 1986
- Drugs, lifestyle, and health: a longitudinal study of urban black youth.American Journal of Public Health, 1986
- Does Drug and Alcohol Use Lead to Failure to Graduate from High School?Journal of Drug Education, 1985
- Black adolescents and youth: An endangered species.Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery, 1984
- Cluster AnalysisPublished by SAGE Publications ,1984
- Life-Style and Drug Involvement Among Youths in an Inner City Junior High SchoolInternational Journal of the Addictions, 1980
- Early Life-Style Differences among Black Male Heroin Addicts and Their Nonaddicted FriendsThe American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 1979
- Adolescent problem drinking. Psychosocial correlates in a national sample study.Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 1978