14 results on '"Jennifer B. Unger"'
Search Results
2. Lucy—Novel Flavored Nicotine Gum, Lozenges, and Pouches: Are They Misleading Consumers?
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Jennifer B. Unger, Joshua Barker, Tess Boley Cruz, Adam M. Leventhal, and Mary Ann Pentz
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Chewing Gum ,Nicotine ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Humans ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Smoking Cessation ,Tobacco Products ,Tobacco Use Cessation Devices ,Article - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The packaging and marketing of nicotine gums, lozenges, and pouches can influence users’ perceptions about which products are evidence-based for tobacco cessation and which are designed for nicotine maintenance—which could keep people nicotine dependent. Lucy, a company that produces flavored nicotine gums, lozenges, and pouches, could cause confusion by mimicking the packaging of traditional chewing gum and using similar marketing for its approved smoking cessation products and non-approved products. METHODS: This commentary describes Lucy’s marketing practices that could prolong nicotine dependence rather than aid cessation. RESULTS: Lucy’s marketing as “FDA approved for smoking cessation” (true for the lozenges but not the gum or pouches) and “PMTA [Premarket Tobacco Product Application] accepted” could create a false narrative of regulatory acceptance. Its scientific conference presentations could imply that it is endorsed by the scientific community. Its colorful pack design, emphasizing flavors and minimizing nicotine warnings, may attract youth and non-nicotine-users to initiate nicotine use. CONCLUSION: Lucy’s promotion of its products as safe alternatives to other forms of tobacco, its packaging that recalls innocuous chewing gum, and its use of social media to advertise its products should be explored by researchers and considered by policymakers for potential population-level health effects. more...
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- 2022
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3. Place Matters in Perceived Tobacco Exposure Among Korean American Young Adults: Mixed Methods Approach
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Mojgan Sami, James Thing, Zarina Abramova, Jimi Huh, and Jennifer B. Unger
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Adult ,Male ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,California ,Young Adult ,Occupational Exposure ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Environmental health ,Korean americans ,Republic of Korea ,Humans ,Medicine ,Young adult ,Asian ,business.industry ,Smoking ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Focus Groups ,Focus group ,Acculturation ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Increased risk ,Content analysis ,Tobacco exposure ,Regression Analysis ,Normative ,Female ,Tobacco Smoke Pollution ,business - Abstract
A sequential mixed methods study was conducted to identify factors influencing perceived norms about smoking and to examine the association of acculturative contexts and normative beliefs among Korean American young adults (KAYA) who face increased risk of smoking. Content analysis of data from 67 participants in 10 focus groups in 2010 led to the development of an online survey in 2012 (N = 475). KAYA overestimated smoking prevalence, reporting Korean-owned businesses (KOB) as primary places of exposure. Our findings revealed that visits to KOB predicted perceived norms about smoking. Modifying perceptions about social norms and involuntary tobacco exposure may be critical in reducing smoking among KAYA. The study's limitations are noted. more...
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- 2014
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4. Boosting a Teen Substance Use Prevention Program with Motivational Interviewing
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Jennifer B. Unger, Donna Spruijt-Metz, Elizabeth Barnett, Steve Sussman, Ping Sun, and Louise A. Rohrbach
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Male ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Motivational interviewing ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Fidelity ,California ,Article ,law.invention ,Interviews as Topic ,Substance abuse prevention ,Young Adult ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Young adult ,School Health Services ,media_common ,Motivation ,Boosting (doping) ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,Substance abuse ,Substance use prevention ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Treatment Outcome ,Female ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
A brief motivational interviewing (MI) intervention may be a viable adjunct to school-based substance abuse prevention programs. This article describes the development and implementation of a brief MI intervention with 573 adolescents (mean age 16.8; 40.3% female, 68% Latino) enrolled in eight continuation high schools in Southern California. Study participants were assigned to the MI condition in a randomized controlled trial of Project Toward No Drug Abuse. Data are provided on dosage, topics discussed, and quality of MI determined with the Motivational Interviewing Skill Code (MISC). Results suggest that the protocol was feasible and implemented with adequate fidelity. The study’s limitations are noted. more...
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- 2012
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5. The Most Critical Unresolved Issues Associated with Race, Ethnicity, Culture, and Substance Use
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Jennifer B. Unger
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Race ethnicity ,Health (social science) ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Cultural identity ,Culture ,Racial Groups ,Cultural context ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Ethnic group ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Research findings ,Article ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Race (biology) ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,Substance use ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Meaning (linguistics) - Abstract
This paper discusses the limitations of previous research on race, ethnicity, culture, and substance use. The study offers the following recommendations for future research in this area: (1) move beyond simple comparisons of mutually exclusive groups, (2) focus on the meaning of an ethnic label to the individual, (3) consider the complex interactions between an individual's cultural identity and the cultural context, (4) understand and acknowledge the researcher's inherent biases, and (5) translate research findings into practice and policy change. more...
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- 2012
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6. Marijuana Use Among Latino Adolescents: Gender Differences in Protective Familial Factors
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Daniel W. Soto, Andrew Lac, Anamara Ritt-Olson, Jennifer B. Unger, Tatiana Basáñez, and Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati
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Male ,Marijuana Abuse ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Marijuana Smoking ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Marijuana use ,Group cohesiveness ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Parent-Child Relations ,Sex Characteristics ,Parenting ,Socialization ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Regression analysis ,Hispanic or Latino ,medicine.disease ,Substance abuse ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Family dynamics ,Adolescent Behavior ,Female ,Family Relations ,Substance use ,Psychology ,Sex characteristics - Abstract
Given the important contextual function of family dynamics and traditional gender roles in Latino cultures, parental influences on substance use among Latino adolescents may differ across genders. This study examined associations between family factors (parental monitoring, parent–child communication, family cohesion, and familism) and marijuana use among 1,369 Latino adolescents in Southern California. Students from seven schools completed surveys in 9th and 11th grades. Longitudinal hierarchical linear regression analyses evaluated the associations between family factors in 9th grade and lifetime marijuana use in 11th grade, as well as gender differences in these associations. Girls reported higher levels of parental monitoring, parental communication, and familism than boys did, but there were no gender differences in family cohesiveness. In a regression model controlling for covariates and previous marijuana use, parent–child communication and family cohesion in 9th grade were each uniquely predictive of lower levels of marijuana consumption in 11th grade. Gender was a statistical moderator, such that higher levels of parent–child communication predicted lower marijuana use among boys, whereas girls’ use was relatively low regardless of parent–child communication levels. Results are discussed in the light of the concurrent socialization processes of family and gender in Latino culture and its relation to preventing delinquent behaviors such as marijuana use. more...
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- 2010
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7. Gender Differences in Body Consciousness and Substance Use Among High-Risk Adolescents
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David StC. Black, Jennifer B. Unger, Steve Sussman, Pallav Pokhrel, and Ping Sun
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Male ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,California ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Sex Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Body Image ,medicine ,Humans ,Association (psychology) ,media_common ,Addiction ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Baseline data ,medicine.disease ,Regression ,Substance abuse ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Etiology ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Substance use ,Consciousness ,Psychology - Abstract
This study explores the association between private and public body consciousness and past 30-day cigarette, alcohol, marijuana, and hard drug use among adolescents. Self-reported data from alterative high school students in California were analyzed (N = 976) using multilevel regression models to account for student clustering within schools. Separate regression analyses were conducted for males and females. Both cross-sectional baseline data and one-year longitudinal prediction models indicated that body consciousness is associated with specific drug use categories differentially by gender. Findings suggest that body consciousness accounts for additional variance in substance use etiology not explained by previously recognized dispositional variables. more...
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- 2010
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8. Peer Influences on Adolescent Cigarette Smoking: A Theoretical Review of the Literature
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Beth R. Hoffman, Jennifer B. Unger, Thomas W. Valente, and Steve Sussman
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Male ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Ethnic group ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Psychology, Social ,Peer Group ,Developmental psychology ,Cigarette smoking ,Perception ,Humans ,media_common ,Social influence ,Social perception ,Addiction ,Smoking ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Peer group ,Models, Theoretical ,United States ,Social relation ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Adolescent Behavior ,Female ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
This article reviews several classes of theories to elucidate the relationship between adolescent cigarette smoking and friends' cigarette smoking. Perceived influence theories hinge upon an adolescent's perception of friends' smoking behavior. External influence theories are those in which friends' smoking behavior overtly influences adolescent smoking. Group level theories examine how differences at the level of subculture, gender, and race/ethnicity influence the relationship under study. Network theories are also discussed. A model integrating relevant theories into a longitudinal model representing friend influences on adolescent smoking is presented, along with implications of the results presented for adolescent tobacco prevention programs. more...
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- 2006
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9. Emotional Intelligence and Acculturation to the United States: Interactions on the Perceived Social Consequences of Smoking in Early Adolescents
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C. Anderson Johnson, Dennis R. Trinidad, Jennifer B. Unger, and Chih-Ping Chou
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Male ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Intelligence ,Population ,Ethnic group ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Developmental psychology ,Interpersonal relationship ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Social perception ,Emotional intelligence ,Smoking ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,United States ,Acculturation ,Social relation ,Affect ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Social Perception ,Pacific islanders ,Female ,Psychology - Abstract
High emotional intelligence (EI) is associated with decreased adolescent smoking. Acculturation to the United States is a risk factor for adolescent smoking. High EI may buffer the relationship between acculturation to the United States and perceptions of the social consequences of smoking (PSC). Emotional intelligence is the ability to: accurately perceive, appraise, and express emotion; access and/or generate feelings in facilitating thought; understand emotion and emotional knowledge; and regulate emotions. Emotional intelligence (measured by the Multifactor Emotional Intelligence Scale, Adolescent Version), acculturation, and PSC were assessed in 2001 from 416 Southern California sixth graders (47% boys; mean age = 11.3 yrs; 32% Hispanic/ Latino, 29% Asian/Pacific Islander, 13% White, 19% Multiethnic, 6% Other). There was a significant EI x US acculturation interaction (p < 0.01) suggesting that those with high EI perceived more social consequences associated with smoking. As the U.S. population becomes increasingly diversified, identifying protective variables and designing effective prevention programs for adolescents of diverse ethnic and cultural backgrounds becomes important. more...
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- 2005
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10. Exploring Peers as a Mediator of the Association Between Depression and Smoking in Young Adolescents
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Joel Milam, Thomas W. Valente, Mitchell Earleywine, Anamara Ritt-Olson, Jennifer B. Unger, Chih-Ping Chou, Dennis R. Trinidad, C. Anderson Johnson, Sylvia Tan, and Elahe Nezami
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Male ,Mediation (statistics) ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Comorbidity ,Affect (psychology) ,Peer Group ,Developmental psychology ,Social Facilitation ,Sex Factors ,Humans ,Child ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,media_common ,Social facilitation ,Depressive Disorder ,Addiction ,Smoking ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Peer group ,Moderation ,Health Surveys ,Affect ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mood ,Female ,Psychology - Abstract
Recent research has suggested that depression causes teens to begin smoking to elevate their mood. Other studies, however, have suggested the reverse causal direction: smoking causes depression. To gain a more complete understanding of the relationship between smoking and depression, potential mediators should be explored. This study explored how peer influences could mediate the relationship between depression and smoking. The methodology of Baron and Kenney was followed to test for mediation and moderation. Peers mediated the relationship between depression and smoking. Separate analyses by gender showed that depression remained significantly associated with smoking when peers were included in the model for girls only. Peer influence was related to depressed affect for both genders. These results provide evidence that peer influences are an important variable to take into consideration when addressing a depression smoking relationship. more...
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- 2005
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11. A 'Drug Abuse' Theoretical Integration: A Transdisciplinary Speculation
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Jennifer B. Unger and Steve Sussman
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Drug ,Motivation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biomedical Research ,Health (social science) ,Substance-Related Disorders ,business.industry ,Interprofessional Relations ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Models, Psychological ,medicine.disease ,Substance abuse ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine ,Humans ,Engineering ethics ,Psychiatry ,Baseline (configuration management) ,business ,Speculation ,media_common - Abstract
This article attempts to integrate previous articles in this issue into an integrative statement that addresses the concept of drug abuse and drug abuse prevention from a transdisciplinary perspective. It is argued that there are two types of drug misusers. There are drug experimenters who make mistakes and drug misusers who utilize drugs as a means to counteract a baseline state of "dis-balance." Prevention must address remediation of this dis-balance for the latter type of drug misuser. more...
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- 2004
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12. A Cultural Psychology Approach to 'Drug Abuse' Prevention
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Jennifer B. Unger, Paula H. Palmer, Elahe Nezami, Sohaila Shakib, Juana Mora, and Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati
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Coping (psychology) ,Cultural Characteristics ,Health (social science) ,Sociology of culture ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Ethnic group ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Cultural system ,medicine.disease ,Acculturation ,Substance abuse ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Adolescent Behavior ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Ethnicity ,medicine ,Humans ,Cultural psychology ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Cultural competence ,Stress, Psychological - Abstract
Much research on the etiology of adolescent drug use has focused on posited risk and protective factors at the level of the individual or small group. However, those proximal influences exist within a cultural context that also influences drug use. To prevent drug use in the diverse population of the United States, research is needed on the influence of the cultural context on adolescent drug use, including the effects of immigrating from one cultural or sociodemographic context to another, as well as the effects of living within two different cultural systems simultaneously. Theoretical models and research methods from cultural psychology and cultural sociology are well-suited to examine the cultural context of drug use. We examine causal mechanisms by which acculturation might affect drug use by using two paradigms to conceptualize culture: a stress/coping paradigm and a cultural values paradigm. Implications of cultural risk and protective factors for transdisciplinary research on drug abuse prevention are also discussed. more...
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- 2004
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13. Family Harmony as a Protective Factor Against Adolescent Tobacco and Alcohol Use in Wuhan, China
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Dennis R. Trinidad, Yan Li, C. Anderson Johnson, Jennifer B. Unger, and Chih-Ping Chou
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Male ,China ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Alcohol Drinking ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Culture ,Protective factor ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Smoking Prevention ,Alcohol ,Academic achievement ,Structural equation modeling ,Developmental psychology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Child ,Students ,media_common ,Depression ,Smoking ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Social environment ,Achievement ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,chemistry ,Adolescent Behavior ,Female ,Aptitude ,Family Relations ,Psychology ,Demography ,Adolescent health - Abstract
To investigate the association between family harmony (FH) and tobacco and alcohol use (TAU) in Chinese adolescents.Participants completed a survey in 1998 as part of a larger study of adolescent health in Wuhan, China. Analyses were performed on subjects for whom complete data were available (n = 183; 50.8% male; mean age = 13.17 yrs, std dev = 0.59). Structural equation modeling was utilized to quantify the relationships between the FH, TAU, depression, and academic aptitude factors.The conceptualized structural equation model was found to have a good fit to the data (CFI = 0.995; chi2 = 39.57 df = 38; p = 40). FH was a significant predictor of TAU (beta = -0.42, p0.05) and was protective. FH' was also negatively related to depression (r = -0.24, p0.05) and positively related to academic achievement/aptitude (r = 0.35, p0.05).These central findings highlight the value and importance placed on FH within the Chinese culture. Future prevention programs may benefit by taking into account FH as a potential mediator of TAU in adolescents in China. more...
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- 2003
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14. Jennifer B. Unger on Zili Sloboda's 'The State of Support for Research on the Epidemiology, Prevention, and Treatment of Drug Use and Drug Use Disorders in the USA'
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Jennifer B. Unger
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Drug ,Gerontology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Family medicine ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Drug Use Disorders ,business ,media_common - Published
- 2012
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