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Gang membership and marijuana use among African American female adolescents in North Carolina

机译:北卡罗来纳州的非洲裔美国女性青少年中的帮派成员身份和大麻使用

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The southeastern US sustains the highest high school dropout rates, and gangs persist in underserved communities. African American female adolescents who drop out of school and are gang members are at substantial risk of exposure to severe violence, physical abuse, and sexual exploitation. In this study of 237 female African American adolescents 16–19 years of age from North Carolina who dropped out or considered dropping out, 11% were current or past gang members. Adolescents who reported gang membership began smoking marijuana at a mean age of 13, whereas those who reported no gang membership began at a mean age of 15 years ( P <0.001). The mean ages of first alcohol use were 14 years and 15 years for gang members and non-gang members, respectively ( P =0.04). Problem alcohol use was high in both groups: 40% and 65% for non-gang and gang members, respectively ( P =0.02). Controlling for frequent marijuana use and problem alcohol use, adolescents who reported gang membership were more likely than non-gang members to experience sexual abuse (odds ratio [OR] =2.60, 95% confidence interval [CI] [1.06, 6.40]), experience physical abuse (OR =7.33, 95% CI [2.90, 18.5]), report emotional abuse from their main partner (OR =3.55, 95% CI [1.44, 8.72]), run away from home (OR =4.65, 95% CI [1.90, 11.4]), get arrested (OR =2.61, 95% CI [1.05, 6.47]), and report violence in their neighborhood including murder (OR =3.27, 95% CI [1.35, 7.96]) and fights with weapons (OR =3.06, 95% CI [1.15, 8.11]). Gang members were less likely to receive emotional support (OR =0.89, 95% CI [0.81, 0.97]). These findings reinforce the urgent need to reach young African American women in disadvantaged communities affiliated with gangs to address the complexity of context and interconnected risk behaviors.
机译:美国东南部的高中辍学率最高,而帮派仍在服务不足的社区中生活。辍学并成为帮派成员的非裔美国女性青少年面临遭受严重暴力,人身虐待和性剥削的巨大风险。在对来自北卡罗来纳州的16-19岁年龄段的237名非洲裔美国女性青少年进行的这项研究中,有11%是现任或过去的团伙成员。报告为团伙成员的青少年平均年龄为13岁,开始吸烟,而未报告为团伙成员的青少年平均年龄为15岁(P <0.001)。团伙成员和非团伙成员的首次饮酒平均年龄分别为14岁和15岁(P = 0.04)。两组的酒精使用问题率均很高:非帮派成员和黑帮成员分别为40%和65%(P = 0.02)。为控制频繁使用大麻和酗酒,报告有帮派成员的青少年比非帮派成员更容易遭受性虐待(优势比[OR] = 2.60,95%置信区间[CI] [1.06,6.40]),遭受身体虐待(OR = 7.33,95%CI [2.90,18.5]),报告主要伴侣的情感虐待(OR = 3.55,95%CI [1.44,8.72]),离家出走(OR = 4.65,95 %CI [1.90,11.4]),被捕(OR = 2.61,95%CI [1.05,6.47]),并报告附近发生暴力事件,包括谋杀(OR = 3.27,95%CI [1.35,7.96])并打架武器(OR = 3.06,95%CI [1.15,8.11])。帮派成员获得情感支持的可能性较小(OR = 0.89,95%CI [0.81,0.97])。这些发现加强了迫切需要让与帮派有联系的处境不利社区的年轻非洲裔美国妇女解决环境的复杂性和相互关联的风险行为。

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