Kristen G Anderson,Sandra A Brown
Kristen G Anderson
The goal of this research was to describe the most common drinking situations for young adolescents (N=1171; 46.6% girls), as well as determine predictors of their drinking in the seventh and eighth grades. Middle school students most frequ...
Relapse Contexts for Substance Abusing Adolescents with Comorbid Psychopathology [0.03%]
共病心理障碍的物质滥用青少年的复发情境研究
Kristen G Anderson,Kevin C Frissell,Sandra A Brown
Kristen G Anderson
The relationship of diagnosis, developmentally relevant factors (e.g., life stress, peer substance use) and mental health symptoms to contexts of a return to substance use were examined for 103 substance abusing adolescents with Axis I psyc...
The Relationship Between Peer, Parent, and Grandparent Norms and Intentions to Use Substances for Urban American Indian Youth [0.03%]
美国都市印第安青年中同龄人、父母和祖父母规范与使用物质意愿之间的关系
Marcos J Martinez,Stephanie L Ayers,Stephen Kulis et al.
Marcos J Martinez et al.
Peer, parent, and grandparent norms may be a protective factor for American Indian (AI) youth intentions to use substances, but little research has explored these influences on urban AI youth. Using OLS regression, a secondary data analysis...
Introduction to Special Issue: Translational Research to Help Parents Respond to Adolescent Substance Use Problems [0.03%]
论父母帮助青少年应对物质使用问题的转化研究导言
Amelia M Arria,Kimberly C Kirby
Amelia M Arria
Parents experience a variety of challenges when they are confronted with the fact that their adolescent child is drinking alcohol or using other substances. This special issue is focused on the work being conducted at the NIDA-funded Parent...
Developing Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT) for Parents of Treatment-Resistant Adolescents [0.03%]
针对难于治疗的青少年开展家庭训练(CRAFT)项目的发展
Kimberly C Kirby,Brian Versek,MaryLouise E Kerwin et al.
Kimberly C Kirby et al.
We describe a project focused on training parents to facilitate their treatment-resistant adolescent's treatment entry and to manage their child after entry into community-based treatment. Controlled studies show that Community Reinforcemen...
What Can Parents Do? A Review of State Laws Regarding Decision Making for Adolescent Drug Abuse and Mental Health Treatment [0.03%]
家长能做什么?关于青少年药物滥用及精神健康治疗的决策问题的州法律综述
MaryLouise E Kerwin,Kimberly C Kirby,Dominic Speziali et al.
MaryLouise E Kerwin et al.
This study examined US state laws regarding parental and adolescent decision-making for substance use and mental health inpatient and outpatient treatment. State statues for requiring parental consent favored mental health over drug abuse t...
Can Parents Provide Brief Intervention Services to Their Drug-Abusing Teenager? [0.03%]
父母能为其滥用药物的青少年提供简短干预服务吗?
Ken C Winters
Ken C Winters
The importance of parents as "interventionists" is supported by reviews of the treatment literature (e.g., Smit, Verdurmen, Monshouwer, & Smit, 2008; Winters, Botzet, Fahnhorst, & Koskey, 2009) as well as the emerging science that home-base...
Development and Initial Evaluation of a Web-Based Program to Increase Parental Awareness and Monitoring of Underage Alcohol Use: A Brief Report [0.03%]
一种增加父母对未成年人饮酒意识和监管的网络程序的研发与初步评估:简报
Pamela C Brown,Michael E Dunn,Alan J Budney
Pamela C Brown
The development of a web-based parent-focused intervention to improve parental awareness and monitoring of adolescent alcohol use was preliminarily evaluated. Upon completion of baseline assessment, sixty-seven parents were randomly assigne...
Cannabis Withdrawal Among Detained Adolescents: Exploring the Impact of Nicotine and Race [0.03%]
被拘留青少年的大麻戒断症状:探究尼古丁和种族的影响
Shayna Soenksen,L A R Stein,Joanna D Brown et al.
Shayna Soenksen et al.
Rates of marijuana use among detained youths are exceptionally high. Research suggests a cannabis withdrawal syndrome is valid and clinically significant; however, these studies have mostly been conducted in highly controlled laboratory set...
Brief Intervention Impact on Truant Youths' Marijuana Use: 18-Month Follow-Up [0.03%]
对逃学青少年的大麻使用情况的简要干预影响:十八个月随访研究
Richard Dembo,Rhissa Briones Robinson,James Schmeidler et al.
Richard Dembo et al.