Research Article

in

Peer Victimization, Internalizing Problems, and Substance Use in Urban African American Adolescents in Chicago: The Relevance of the Self-Medication Hypothesis

Have access already?

Get access to this article:

Or get access to the particular issue:

Or get access to the entire journal:

Advertisement

Abstract

The aim of the study was to explore the link between peer victimization and substance use and tested the mediating role of internalizing problems in urban African American adolescents in Chicago. Six hundred and thirty-eight adolescents in Chicago's Southside participated in the study. Results from the hierarchical linear regression analysis showed that youth who reported peer victimization were at risk of internalizing problems. Those who were bullied by their peers were more likely to display internalizing problems, which was also significantly associated with substance use. Consistent with the self-medication hypothesis, findings from the study suggest that bullied youth are likely to display internalizing problems and turn to substance use. Implications for mental health practice in school settings are also discussed.

Article usage
Article Usage
Period Abstract Full PDF Total
Apr 2024 18 0 0 18
Mar 2024 18 0 2 20
Feb 2024 11 0 0 11
Jan 2024 14 3 0 17
Dec 2023 20 0 0 20
Nov 2023 23 2 1 26
Oct 2023 25 1 0 26
Sep 2023 28 0 0 28
Aug 2023 11 0 0 11
Jul 2023 19 0 0 19
Jun 2023 18 0 0 18
May 2023 28 0 0 28
Apr 2023 14 0 0 14
Mar 2023 28 0 0 28
Feb 2023 22 0 1 23
Jan 2023 32 0 0 32
Dec 2022 17 0 0 17
Nov 2022 26 2 2 30
Oct 2022 25 1 0 26
Sep 2022 41 1 0 42
Aug 2022 19 0 0 19
Jul 2022 26 0 0 26
Jun 2022 27 0 0 27
May 2022 21 0 0 21
Apr 2022 31 3 0 34
Mar 2022 42 0 0 42
Feb 2022 25 0 1 26
Jan 2022 27 0 0 27
Dec 2021 28 0 0 28
Nov 2021 39 4 2 45
Oct 2021 93 0 0 93
Sep 2021 279 1 1 281
Aug 2021 67 0 0 67
Jul 2021 9 0 2 11
Jun 2021 9 0 0 9
May 2021 41 0 0 41
Apr 2021 25 0 0 25
Mar 2021 30 0 0 30
Feb 2021 33 0 0 33
Jan 2021 74 0 0 74
Dec 2020 34 1 0 35
Nov 2020 58 0 0 58
Oct 2020 72 0 0 72
Sep 2020 33 3 2 38
Aug 2020 25 0 0 25
Jul 2020 20 0 0 20
Jun 2020 28 1 1 30
May 2020 42 1 1 44
Apr 2020 110 4 1 115
Mar 2020 215 2 3 220
Feb 2020 702 0 0 702
Jan 2020 1493 1 0 1494
Dec 2019 1429 1 0 1430
Nov 2019 1575 2 2 1579
Oct 2019 1676 4 3 1683
Sep 2019 0 1 0 1