NCJ Number
251334
Date Published
May 2016
Length
9 pages
Annotation
This study examined sex and racial/ethnic differences in the prevalence of nine substance-use disorders (SUDs)alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, hallucinogen or PCP, opiate, amphetamine, inhalant, sedative, and unspecified drug in youths during the 12 years after detention.
Abstract
The study used data from the Northwestern Juvenile Project, a prospective longitudinal study of 1,829 youths randomly sampled from detention in Chicago, Illinois, starting in 1995 and reinterviewed up to nine times in the community or correctional facilities through 2011. Independent interviewers assessed SUDs with Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children 2.3 (baseline) and Diagnostic Interview Schedule Version IV (follow-ups). Overall, the study found that after detention, SUDs differed markedly by sex, race/ethnicity, and substance abused; and, contrary to stereotypes, did not disproportionately affect African-Americans. Services to treat substance abuseduring incarceration and after releasewould reach many people in need, and address health disparities in a highly vulnerable population. The study found that by median age 28 years, 91.3 percent of males and 78.5 percent of females had ever had an SUD. At most follow-ups, males had greater odds of alcohol- and marijuana-use disorders. Drug-use disorders were most prevalent among non-Hispanic Whites, followed by Hispanics, then African-Americans (e.g., compared with African-Americans, non-Hispanic Whites had 32.1 times the odds of cocaine-use disorder [95 percent confidence interval = 13.8, 74.7]).