Onset of Drug Use among Rural Black Youth
Abstract
A sample of 362 Black students (grades 7 to 12) who reside in a rural county in Alabama was surveyed by teacher-administered questionnaire to examine the age of onset and periods of risk for drug use, and patterns of multiple drug use. A questionnaire was used also to obtain demographic parameters of drug use as well as information about the use of six categories of drugs. Results suggest that aggregately rural Black youth began drinking alcohol, smoking cigarettes and marijuana, and using smokeless tobacco and solvents by age 10 years, whereas initiation into cocaine use began by age 1 years. The period of risk for initiation of drug use was between ages 10 and 14 years. Approximately 65% of ever-users were single drug users, whereas 35% were multiple drug users at the period of initial experimentation. © 1989, Sage Publications. All rights reserved.
Publication Title
Journal of Adolescent Research
Recommended Citation
Okwumabua, J., Okwumabua, T., Winston, B., & Walker, H. (1989). Onset of Drug Use among Rural Black Youth. Journal of Adolescent Research, 4 (2), 238-246. https://doi.org/10.1177/074355488942010