2010
DOI: 10.15288/jsad.2010.71.938
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Gender Differences in Family Formation Behavior: The Effects of Adolescent Substance Use

Abstract: ABSTRACT. Objective: This study extended previous research on the association of substance use with family formation behavior by assessing the effects of the type and extent of adolescent substance use in a competing risks model. Substance use was expected to increase the likelihood of nonmarital family formation overall and differently by gender. Method: Longitudinal data from home interviews with the 14-to 16-year-old respondents to the fi rst wave of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 (N = 4,011… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
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References 47 publications
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“…For example, the negative link was revealed in the United States or United Kingdom. (Ryan 2010;Staff et al 2010;Collins et al 2007;Duncan et al 2006) Yet, some studies from Asia and France did not observe any association between marriage and drinking or even reported higher alcohol intake among the married population. (Park et al 2008;Saito et al 2005;Zins et al 2003) Despite the large cross-national variation, existing empirical research rarely uses comparative data or pays any attention to the cross-country differences in the marriagehealth behavior link.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, the negative link was revealed in the United States or United Kingdom. (Ryan 2010;Staff et al 2010;Collins et al 2007;Duncan et al 2006) Yet, some studies from Asia and France did not observe any association between marriage and drinking or even reported higher alcohol intake among the married population. (Park et al 2008;Saito et al 2005;Zins et al 2003) Despite the large cross-national variation, existing empirical research rarely uses comparative data or pays any attention to the cross-country differences in the marriagehealth behavior link.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%