Fourth, using Add Health data, McGlinchey and Harvey, (2015) found a late bedtime in adolescence (M age = 16) to
predict cigarette use, alcohol abuse, illicit drug use, criminal activity, and emotional distress 6 years later (M age = 21.8), with all but one of these associations (alcohol abuse) still significant when controlling for parent — child attachment and peer delinquency.
Not exact matches
Past - month e-
cigarette use predicted future conventional
cigarette use across 3 longitudinal waves among high school youth.
When the researchers looked at whether alcohol,
cigarette, and marijuana
use predicted suicidality, they found that for all racial groups, except Pacific Islanders,
using alcohol in the past month was linked to 1.5 - 2.1 times greater odds for having attempted suicide in the past year.
Finally, «family talking about the dangers of
cigarettes,» «family involvement in schools» and «belief that their families cared about them»
predicted lower substance
use regardless of location, although minimal variance was explained.
In prior work we
used a longitudinal design to test whether the interaction between internalizing and externalizing symptoms in early adolescence (11 — 12 years old)
predicted adolescent alcohol and drug
use (a composite of
cigarette, marijuana, and other illicit SU) 2 years later (Scalco et al. 2014).
Maternal
cigarette smoking during pregnancy
predicts drug
use via externalizing behavior in two community - based samples of adolescents.