In terms of public health, adolescent substance use disorders have
far-reaching social and economic ramifications. The numerous adverse
consequences associated with teenage drinking and substance use
disorders include fatal and nonfatal injuries from alcohol- and
drug-related motor vehicle accidents, suicides, homicides, violence,
delinquency (Dembo et al., 1991), psychiatric disorders, and risky
sexual practices (Jainchill et al., in press). Longitudinal studies
have established associations between adolescent substance use
disorders and (1) impulsivity, alienation, and psychological distress
(Hansell and White, 1991; Shedler and Block, 1990), (2) delinquency and
criminal behavior (National Institute of Justice, 1994), (3)
irresponsible sexual activity that increases susceptibility to HIV
infection (DiClemente, 1990), and (4) psychiatric or neurological
impairments associated with drug use, especially inhalants, and other
medical complications (SAMHSA, 1996).
Substance use disorders that begin at an early age, especially when there is no remission of the disorder, exact substantial economic costs to society (Children's Defense Fund, 1991). The trend toward early onset of substance use disorders has increasingly resulted in adolescents who enter treatment with greater developmental deficits and perhaps much greater neurological deficits than have been previously observed. Moreover, the risks of traumatic injury, unintended pregnancy, and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) are high in adolescents in general. Drug involvement that is superimposed on these already high risks has numerous potentially adverse consequences that have not yet been the subject of in depth study beyond basic population studies.
Alcohol-related motor vehicle accidents exact a heavy toll on society
in terms of economic costs and lost productivity. Nearly half (45.1
percent) of all traffic fatalities are alcohol-related, and it is
estimated that 18 percent of drivers 16 to 20 years old--a total of 2.5
million adolescents--drive under the influence of alcohol. According to
the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System conducted by the CDC, which
monitors health risk behaviors among youths and young adults,
unintentional injuries, including motor vehicle accidents, are by far
the leading cause of death in adolescents, causing 29 percent of all
deaths. An estimated 50 percent of these deaths are related to the
consumption of alcohol (CDC, 1998).
The link between adolescent substance use and juvenile delinquency is
complex. There is a strong and consistent association between conduct
disorder and substance use among teenagers (Crowley and Riggs, 1995).
Many young people entering the juvenile justice system have a host of
problems ranging from impaired emotional, psychological, and
educational functioning to physical abuse, sexual victimization, and
substance use disorders (Dembo, 1996). A growing trend is that most of
the teenagers entering residential treatment for substance use
disorders have been criminally active and mandated to treatment by the
criminal justice system (Jainchill, 1997).
Drug testing data collected on male juvenile arrestees through the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) confirm a strong and continuing relationship between the extent of drug use and juvenile crime (NIJ, 1997). An additional finding from the data is that the median positive rate for marijuana use among male juvenile arrestees increased from 41 percent in 1995 to 52 percent in 1996.
Substance use can prevent an adolescent from completing the
developmental tasks of adolescence, such as dating, marrying, bearing
and raising children, establishing a career, and building rewarding
personal relationships (Havighurst, 1972; Baumrind and Moselle, 1985;
Newcomb and Bentler, 1989). Because substance use changes the way
people approach and experience interactions, the adolescent's
psychological and social development is compromised, as is the
formation of a strong self-identity. Adolescents' use of alcohol or
drugs may also hinder their emotional and intellectual growth. Some
adolescents may use substances to compensate for a lack of rewarding
personal relationships. Instead of developing a sense of empowerment
from healthy personal development, the substance-using adolescent is
likely to acquire a superficial and false self-image as he becomes more
deeply entrenched in the drug experience (MacKenzie, 1993). Naturally,
treating an adolescent with substance use disorders as early as
possible maximizes the opportunity to stem these initially short-term,
but potentially long-term, ill effects.
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