Community epidemiology of risk and adolescent substance use: practical questions for enhancing prevention.


Abstract

To promote an effective approach to prevention, the community diagnosis model helps communities systematically assess and prioritize risk factors to guide the selection of preventive interventions.

This increasingly widely used model relies primarily on individual-level research that links risk and protective factors to substance use outcomes. I discuss common assumptions in the translation of such research concerning the definition of risk factor elevation; the equivalence, independence, and stability of relations between risk factors and problem behaviors; and community differences in risk factors and risk factor-problem behavior relations.

Exploring these assumptions could improve understanding of the relations of risk factors and substance use within and across communities and enhance the efficacy of the community diagnosis model.

This approach can also be applied to other areas of public health where individual and community levels of risk and outcomes intersect.


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Publication date

2012-03-06


Journal

American journal of public health
Am J Public Health (1541-0048)

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Language

Eng.


Copyright

American journal of public health

Prevention Research Center, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA. mef11 [at] psu.edu


Release reference

Am J Public Health. 2012 Mar;102(3):457-68



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