138 results on '"Brian C. Kelly"'
Search Results
2. Efficacy of WeChat-based online smoking cessation intervention (‘WeChat WeQuit’) in China: a randomised controlled trialResearch in context
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Jinsong Tang, Jie Yang, Yi Liu, Xiaocong Liu, Ling Li, Yunkai Sun, Jieyin Jin, Yehong Fang, Zitang Zhou, Yunfei Wang, Yueheng Liu, Wei Chen, Ann McNeill, Brian C. Kelly, Joanna E. Cohen, and Yanhui Liao
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Online smoking cessation ,Quit smoking ,‘WeChat WeQuit’ ,WeChat-based intervention ,Randomised controlled trial ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: China has approximately 300 million current smokers, and smoking cessation services are limited. This study aimed to assess the efficacy of a Cognitive Behavioral Theory-based smoking cessation intervention (‘WeChat WeQuit’) via the most popular social media platform in China, WeChat. Methods: A parallel, single-blind, two-arm randomised controlled trial was conducted via WeChat between March 19, 2020 and November 16, 2022. Chinese-speaking adult smokers (n = 2000) willing to quit within one month were recruited and randomised in a 1:1 ratio. The intervention group (n = 1005) received the ‘WeChat WeQuit’ program and the control group (n = 955) received control messages for 14 weeks (2-week prequit and 12-week postquit). Participants were followed up to 26 weeks after the quit date. The primary outcome was self-reported continuous smoking abstinence rate, biochemically validated at 26 weeks. The secondary outcomes were self-reported 7-day and continuous abstinence rates at 6 months. All analyses were by intention to treat. The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03169686). Findings: By intention-to-treat analysis, the biochemically verified 26-week continuous abstinence rate was 11.94% in the intervention group and 2.81% in the control group (OR = 4.68, 95% CI: 3.07–7.13, p
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- 2023
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3. The association between local tobacco retail licensing and adult cigarette smoking by race/ethnicity, income, and education in California (2012–2019)
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Bukola Usidame, Yanmei Xie, David Colston, Andrea R. Titus, Lisa Henriksen, Brian C. Kelly, and Nancy L. Fleischer
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Tobacco control ,Tobacco retail license ,California ,Adult smoking ,Policy ,Medicine - Abstract
This study investigates the association between the strength of TRL ordinances and adult cigarette use, and differences in the relationship by sociodemographic characteristics, using California as a case study. We merged geocoded data from the California Health Interview Survey with the State of Tobacco Control Reports from the American Lung Association from 2012 to 2019. Each jurisdiction was graded (A-strongest to F-weakest) based on the strength of their TRL ordinance while current cigarette use was defined as respondents who had smoked 100 or more cigarettes in their lifetime and currently smoke cigarettes every day or some days. We estimated multilevel logistic regression models to test the relationship between the strength of the TRL ordinance and current cigarette use and tested for effect modification by including interaction terms for race/ethnicity, income, and education in separate models. 11.6 % of sample participants from all years (n = 132,209) were current cigarette smokers. Adults in jurisdictions with stronger grades (A-D) had lower odds of current cigarette use (OR = 0.89, 95 % CI: 0.79–1.01) compared to adults in jurisdictions with the weakest grade (F), but the association was not statistically significant (p
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- 2023
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4. Sleep quality in cigarette smokers and nonsmokers: findings from the general population in central China
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Yanhui Liao, Liqin Xie, Xiaogang Chen, Brian C. Kelly, Chang Qi, Chen Pan, Mei Yang, Wei Hao, Tieqiao Liu, and Jinsong Tang
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Sleep quality ,Sleep disturbances ,Cigarette smoking ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Sleep problems are common in the general population. Cigarette smoking is common in the general population of China. Examinations of the prevalence of poor sleep quality among Chinese smokers and nonsmokers are still lacking. This study was designed to examine sleep quality and sleep disturbances among cigarette smokers and nonsmokers in the general population in central China. Methods In this population-based sampling project, we used a multi-stage sampling method to recruit survey participants from September 2012 to October 2012 in rural and urban areas of Hunan province, China. A total of 27,300 subjects were sampled from the general population and 26,282 completed the self-report of cigarette smoking characteristics. Cigarette smoker was defined as having smoked ≥100 cigarette in a lifetime and smoked during the last 28 days. Cigarette smoking characteristics were obtained from smokers, including cigarettes per day, years of smoking, quit attempts, and smoking cravings. The Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) was applied to assess quality of sleep and sleep disturbances (PSQI score > 5). Results Significantly more smokers than nonsmokers demonstrated poor sleep quality and sleep disturbances. Among smokers, linear regression analyses showed that poor sleep was inversely associated with cigarettes per day, and positively associated with years of smoking, quit attempts, and smoking craving. Logistic regression analysis showed that quit attempts and smoking cravings were associated with higher odds of sleep disturbances. Conclusions Sleep disturbances were more prevalent among cigarette smokers than nonsmokers. Smokers also varied in sleep problems on the basis of the characteristics of their smoking. Smokers should be informed about the link between cigarette smoking and poor sleep quality, and should be advised that one of several important health benefits from smoking cessation could be the improvement of sleep quality. Sleep therapy should be recommended as an adjunctive treatment for smoking cessation.
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- 2019
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5. Supporting Future Cannabis Policy – Developing a Standard Joint Unit: A Brief Back-Casting Exercise
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Hugo López-Pelayo, Silvia Matrai, Mercè Balcells-Olivero, Eugènia Campeny, Fleur Braddick, Matthijs G. Bossong, Olga S. Cruz, Paolo Deluca, Geert Dom, Daniel Feingold, Tom P. Freeman, Pablo Guzman, Chandni Hindocha, Brian C. Kelly, Nienke Liebregts, Valentina Lorenzetti, Jakob Manthey, João Matias, Clara Oliveras, Maria Teresa Pons, Jürgen Rehm, Moritz Rosenkranz, Zoe Swithenbank, Luc van Deurse, Julian Vicente, Mike Vuolo, Marcin Wojnar, and Antoni Gual
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cannabis ,standard units ,harm-reduction ,risky use ,prevention ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
The standardization of cannabis doses is a priority for research, policy-making, clinical and harm-reduction interventions and consumer security. Scientists have called for standard units of dosing for cannabis, similar to those used for alcohol. A Standard Joint Unit (SJU) would facilitate preventive and intervention models in ways similar to the Standard Drink (SD). Learning from the SD experiences allows researchers to tackle emerging barriers to the SJU by applying modern forecasting methods. During a workshop at the Lisbon Addictions Conference 2019, a back-casting foresight method was used to address challenges and achieve consensus in developing an SJU. Thirty-two professionals from 13 countries and 10 disciplines participated. Descriptive analysis of the workshop was carried out by the organizers and shared with the participants in order to suggest amendments. Several characteristics of the SJU were defined: (1) core values: easy-to use, universal, focused on THC, accurate, and accessible; (2) key challenges: sudden changes in patterns of use, heterogeneity of cannabis compounds as well as in administration routes, variations over time in THC concentrations, and of laws that regulate the legal status of recreational and medical cannabis use); and (3) facilitators: previous experience with standardized measurements, funding opportunities, multi-stakeholder support, high prevalence of cannabis users, and widespread changes in legislation. Participants also identified three initial steps for the implementation of a SJU by 2030: (1) Building a task-force to develop a consensus-based SJU; (2) Expanded available national-level data; (3) Linking SJU consumption to the concept of “risky use,” based on evidence of harms.
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- 2021
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6. Adolescent Cannabis Use During a Period of Rapid Policy Change: Evidence From the PATH Study
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Maria M. Orsini, Mike Vuolo, and Brian C. Kelly
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health - Abstract
To determine whether shifts in various state-level cannabis policies are associated with individual-level changes in adolescent cannabis use following implementation.We use the restricted-access youth cohort of the PATH Study, a recent, longitudinal, and nationally representative dataset, to assess whether changes in cannabis policy affect youth cannabis use. Data include respondents aged 12 to 17 years across up to six repeated observations (N = 26,673). Hybrid (between-person and within-person) panel models are used to examine adolescent past-month cannabis use.Within-person effects showed that the odds of past-month cannabis use are lower (odds ratio [OR] = 0.632; p.05) in years when a respondent's state allowed only cannabidiol (CBD) compared to years when the state had legalized medical cannabis. The odds of past-month cannabis use are lower during years when a respondent's state had decriminalized (OR = 0.617; p.01) or criminalized (OR = 0.648; p.05) adult recreational cannabis possession compared to years when it was legalized. These effects were robust to numerous controls, including time and state fixed effects. By contrast, significant between-person effects became nonsignificant with state fixed effects included, implying that state-level average use distinguishes average differences between states rather than policy.Liberalized cannabis policy is significantly associated with recent adolescent cannabis use. The most consequential policy shift associated with adolescent use is from either criminalization or decriminalization of cannabis possession to legalization, such that states making these changes should consider additional prevention efforts.
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- 2023
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7. Sibling influences on adolescent alcohol use during the spring 2020 COVID-19 pandemic shutdown
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Shawn D. Whiteman, Sahitya Maiya, Jenna R. Cassinat, Sarfaraz Serang, Brian C. Kelly, Sarah A. Mustillo, and Jennifer L. Maggs
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Medicine (miscellaneous) - Abstract
To examine the bidirectional associations between adolescent siblings' alcohol use before and during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in Spring 2020 and whether youths' stress about missed social connections (i.e., social disruption stress) moderated these associations.The sample consisted of 682 families (2,046 participants) with two adolescent siblings (older siblings:Accounting for younger siblings' earlier drinking and other confounders, older siblings' prepandemic drinking predicted a greater likelihood of younger siblings' drinking during the Spring 2020 pandemic shutdown. This association was not moderated by younger siblings' social disruption stress. The association between younger siblings' prepandemic drinking and older siblings' drinking during the shutdown was moderated by older siblings' social disruption stress. Specifically, younger siblings' earlier drinking was more strongly related to older siblings' drinking during the shutdown if older siblings reported more social disruption stress.Siblings are important socialization agents of alcohol use during adolescence. Sibling interventions may be particularly salient during times of stress and isolation when youths' social interactions with peers may be limited. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2023
8. The efficacy of mobile phone-based text message interventions (‘Happy Quit’) for smoking cessation in China
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Yanhui Liao, Qiuxia Wu, Jinsong Tang, Fengyu Zhang, Xuyi Wang, Chang Qi, Haoyu He, Jiang Long, Brian C Kelly, and Joanna Cohen
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Mobile phone-based text message ,Interventions ,‘Happy Quit’ ,Smoking cessation ,China ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Considering the extreme shortage of smoking cessation services in China, and the acceptability, feasibility and efficacy of mobile phone-based text message interventions for quitting smoking in other countries, here we propose a study of “the efficacy of mobile phone-based text message interventions (‘Happy Quit’) for smoking cessation in China”. The primary objective of this proposed project is to assess whether a program of widely accessed mobile phone-based text message interventions (‘Happy Quit’) will be effective at helping people in China who smoke, to quit. Based on the efficacy of previous studies in smoking cessation, we hypothesize that ‘Happy Quit’ will be an effective, feasible and affordable smoking cessation program in China. Methods/Design In this single-blind, randomized trial, undertaken in China, about 2000 smokers willing to make a quit attempt will be randomly allocated, using an independent telephone randomization system that includes a minimization algorithm balancing for sex (male, female), age (19–34 or >34 years), educational level (≤ or >12 years), and Fagerstrom score for nicotine addiction (≤5, >5), to ‘Happy Quit’, comprising motivational messages and behavioral-change support, or to a control group that receives text messages unrelated to quitting. Messages will be developed to be suitable for Chinese. A pilot study will be conducted before the intervention to modify the library of messages and interventions. The primary outcome will be self-reported continuous smoking abstinence. A secondary outcome will be point prevalence of abstinence. Abstinence will be assessed at six time points (4, 8, 12, 16, 20 and 24 weeks post-intervention). A third outcome will be reductions in number of cigarettes smoked per day. Discussion/Implications The results will provide valuable insights into bridging the gap between need and services received for smoking cessation interventions and tobacco use prevention in China. It will also serve as mHealth model for extending the public health significance of other interventions, such as mental health interventions. Trial registration NCT02693626 (Registration data April 11, 2016).
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- 2016
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9. The Liberalization of Cannabis Possession Laws and Birth Outcomes: A State-Level Fixed Effects Analysis, 2003–2019
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Christie Sennott, Sadé L. Lindsay, Brian C. Kelly, and Mike Vuolo
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Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Demography - Published
- 2022
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10. Effects of County-Level Opioid Dispensing Rates on Individual-Level Patterns of Prescription Opioid and Heroin Consumption: Evidence From National U.S. Data
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Mike Vuolo and Brian C. Kelly
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Analgesics, Opioid ,Heroin ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Prescriptions ,Humans ,Bayes Theorem ,Child ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Prescription Drug Misuse ,United States - Abstract
The authors examined directly whether county-level changes in opioid dispensing rates affect individual-level prescription opioid misuse, frequency of use, and dependence, as well as the same outcomes for heroin.Using data from the restricted-access National Survey on Drug Use and Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's retail opioid prescription database, the Prescription Drug Abuse Policy System, and the U.S. Census, the authors applied fixed-effects models to determine whether county-level dispensing rates affected prescription opioid outcomes as intended and whether changes in rates adversely affected heroin use outcomes. Bayes factors were used to confirm evidence for null findings.The sample included 748,800 respondents age 12 and older from 2006 to 2016. The odds of prescription opioid misuse, increased frequency of misuse, and dependence were 7.2%, 3.5%, and 10.4% higher, respectively, per standard deviation increase in the county-level opioid dispensing rate per 100 persons. There was no evidence for any association between opioid dispensing rates and the three heroin outcomes. The odds ratio was nonsignificant according to frequentist techniques in fixed-effects models, and Bayesian techniques confirmed very strong support for the null hypothesis.County-level opioid dispensing rates are directly associated with individual-level prescription opioid misuse, frequency of misuse, and dependence. Changes in dispensing were not associated with population shifts in heroin use. Reductions in opioid dispensing rates have contributed to stemming prior increases in prescription opioid misuse while not adversely affecting heroin use. Physicians and other health care providers can take action to minimize opioid dispensing for tangible benefits regarding prescription opioid misuse without adverse effects on heroin use.
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- 2022
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11. Cognitive aptitude, peers, and trajectories of marijuana use from adolescence through young adulthood.
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Brian C Kelly and Mike Vuolo
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Using a nationally representative longitudinal cohort, we examine how cognitive aptitude in early adolescence is associated with heterogeneous pathways of marijuana use from age sixteen through young adulthood. We also examine whether this relationship can be explained by the role of cognitive aptitude in the social organization of peer group deviance. METHODS:Using the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, we identified 5 latent trajectories of frequency of marijuana use between ages 16 and 26: abstainers, dabblers, early heavy quitters, consistent users, and persistent heavy users. Multinomial regression assessed the relationship of cognitive aptitude in early adolescence with these latent trajectories, including the role of peer group substance use in this relationship. RESULTS:A one decile increase in cognitive aptitude in early adolescence is associated with greater relative risk of the dabbler trajectory (RR = 1.048; p < .001) and consistent user trajectory (RR = 1.126; p < .001), but lower relative risk of the early heavy quitter trajectory (RR = 0.917; p < .05) in comparison with the abstainer trajectory. There was no effect for the persistent heavy user trajectory. The inclusion of peer group substance use-either via illegal drugs or smoking-had no effect on these relationships. CONCLUSIONS:Adolescents who rate higher in cognitive aptitude during early adolescence may be more likely to enter into consistent but not extreme trajectories of marijuana use as they age into young adulthood. Cognition may not influence patterns of marijuana use over time via the organization of peer groups.
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- 2019
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12. Effectiveness of a text-messaging-based smoking cessation intervention ('Happy Quit') for smoking cessation in China: A randomized controlled trial.
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Yanhui Liao, Qiuxia Wu, Brian C Kelly, Fengyu Zhang, Yi-Yuan Tang, Qianjin Wang, Honghong Ren, Yuzhu Hao, Mei Yang, Joanna Cohen, and Jinsong Tang
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Medicine - Abstract
BACKGROUND:China has the highest global prevalence of cigarette smokers, accounting for more than 40% of the total cigarette consumption in the world. Considering the shortage of smoking cessation services in China, and the acceptability, feasibility, and efficacy of mobile-phone-based text messaging interventions for quitting smoking in other countries, we conducted a mobile-phone-based smoking cessation study in China. METHODS AND FINDINGS:We conducted a randomized controlled trial in China across 30 cities and provinces from August 17, 2016, to May 27, 2017. Adult smokers aged 18 years and older with the intention to quit smoking were recruited and randomized to a 12-week high-frequency messaging (HFM) or low-frequency messaging (LFM) intervention ("Happy Quit") or to a control group in a 5:2:3 ratio. The control group received only text messages unrelated to quitting. The primary outcome was biochemically verified continuous smoking abstinence at 24 weeks. Secondary outcomes included (1) self-reported 7-day point prevalence of abstinence (i.e., not even a puff of smoke, for the last 7 days) at 1, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, and 24 weeks; (2) self-reported continuous abstinence at 4, 12, and 24 weeks; and (3) self-reported average number of cigarettes smoked per day. A total of 1,369 participants received 12 weeks of intervention or control text messages with continued follow-up for 12 weeks. The baseline characteristics of participants among the HFM (n = 674), LFM (n = 284), and control (n = 411) groups were similar. The study sample included 1,295 (94.6%) men; participants had a mean age of 38.1 (SD 9.79) years and smoked an average of 20.1 (SD 9.19) cigarettes per day. We included the participants in an intention-to-treat analysis. Biochemically verified continuous smoking abstinence at 24 weeks occurred in 44/674 participants in the HFM group (6.5%), 17/284 participants in the LFM group (6.0%), and 8/411 participants (1.9%) in the control group; participants in both the HFM (odds ratio [OR] = 3.51, 95% CI 1.64-7.55, p < 0.001) and the LFM (OR = 3.21, 95% CI 1.36-7.54], p = 0.002) intervention groups were more likely to quit smoking than those in the control group. However, there was no difference in quit rate between the HFM and LFM interventions. We also found that the 7-day point quit rate from week 1 to week 24 ranged from approximately 10% to more than 26% with the intervention and from less than 4% to nearly 12% without the intervention. Those who continued as smokers in the HFM group smoked 1 to 3 fewer cigarettes per day than those in the LFM group over the 24 weeks of trial. Among study limitations, the participants were able to use other smoking cessation services (although very few participants reported using them), cotinine tests can only detect smoking status for a few days, and the proportion of quitters was small. CONCLUSIONS:Our findings demonstrate that a mobile-phone-based text messaging intervention (Happy Quit), with either high- or low-frequency messaging, led to smoking cessation in the present study, albeit in a low proportion of smokers, and can therefore be considered for use in large-scale intervention efforts in China. Mobile-phone-based interventions could be paired with other smoking cessation services for treatment-seeking smokers in China. TRIAL REGISTRATION:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02693626.
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- 2018
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13. Doing and Redoing Emphasized Femininity: How Women Use Emotion Work to Manage Competing Expectations in College Hookup Culture
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Reilly Kincaid, Christie Sennott, and Brian C. Kelly
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Gender Studies ,Social Psychology ,Developmental and Educational Psychology - Published
- 2022
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14. Trends in Psychotropic Drug−Implicated Cardiovascular Mortality: Patterns in U.S. Mortality, 1999−2020
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Brian C. Kelly and Mike Vuolo
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Epidemiology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health - Published
- 2023
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15. Social Network Ties and Responses to COVID-19 Among E-Cigarette Users
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Brian C. Kelly, Mark Pawson, and Mike Vuolo
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Health (social science) ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Medicine (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Social networks can enhance behavioral changes or entrench existing patterns of behavior. We aimed to identify how network ties to other e-cigarette users shaped responses to the pandemic and e-cigarette considerations. A national U.S. survey of 562 e-cigarette users was conducted during April 2020. Participants self-reported network ties to other e-cigarette users and pandemic outcomes: receiving expressions of concern about vaping, risk for a bad COVID outcome, changes in e-cigarette risk perceptions, and considerations of quitting. Each additional e-cigarette user tie was associated with a 0.014 unit increase in expressions of concern ( p < 0.001), a 0.034 unit increase in perceived risk of a bad outcome ( p < 0.05), and 3.9% higher odds of quit considerations (OR = 1.039; p < 0.01). Family ties to e-cigarette users were particularly important. Additional e-cigarette users within a network shaped risk perceptions in response to COVID-19. Network ties to other e-cigarette users have implications for cessation or reduction of e-cigarette use.
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- 2023
16. Do naloxone access laws affect perceived risk of heroin use? Evidence from national US data
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Brian C. Kelly and Mike Vuolo
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Adolescent ,Narcotic Antagonists ,Population ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Affect (psychology) ,Article ,Heroin ,Naloxone ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Harm reduction ,Bayes Theorem ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,United States ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Risk perception ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Expanded access ,Law ,Drug Overdose ,Null hypothesis ,Psychology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Whether expanded access to naloxone reduces perceptions of risk about opioid use has been subject to debate. Our aim was to assess how implementation of naloxone access laws shapes perceived risk of heroin use. DESIGN Using data from the restricted-access National Survey on Drug Use and Health, Prescription Drug Abuse Policy System and the US Census, we applied two-way fixed-effects models to determine whether naloxone access laws decreased perceived risk of any heroin use or regular heroin use. We used Bayes factors (BFs) to confirm evidence for null findings. SETTING United States. PARTICIPANTS A total of 884 800 respondents aged 12 and older from 2004 to 2016. MEASUREMENTS A binary indicator of whether a state implemented naloxone access laws was regressed on respondent-perceived risk of (1) any heroin use and (2) regular heroin use. Ratings of perceived risk were assessed on a scale of 1 (none) to 4 (great risk). FINDINGS In all instances, the BFs support evidence for the null hypothesis. Across models with three distinct specifications of naloxone access laws, we found no evidence of decreased risk perceptions, as confirmed by BFs ranging from 0.009 to 0.057. Across models of specific vulnerable subgroups, such as people who use opioids (BFs = 0.039-0.225) or young people (BFs = 0.009-0.158), we found no evidence of decreased risk perceptions. Across diverse subpopulations by gender (BFs = 0.011-0.083), socio-economic status (BFs = 0.015-0.168) or race/ethnicity (BFs = 0.016-0.094), we found no evidence of decreased risk perceptions. CONCLUSIONS There appears to be no empirical evidence that implementation of naloxone access laws has adversely affected perceptions of risk of heroin in the broader US population or within vulnerable subgroups or diverse subpopulations.
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- 2021
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17. Changes in family chaos and family relationships during the COVID-19 pandemic: Evidence from a longitudinal study
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Jennifer L. Maggs, Jenna R. Cassinat, Sarfaraz Serang, Aryn M. Dotterer, Shawn D. Whiteman, Brian C. Kelly, and Sarah A. Mustillo
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Change score ,Longitudinal study ,Adolescent ,Parenting ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Perspective (graphical) ,COVID-19 ,PsycINFO ,Sibling relationship ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Pandemic ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Parent-Child Relations ,Sibling ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,Pandemics ,Aged ,Demography - Abstract
The purpose of this article was to explore how family chaos, parenting processes, parent-child relationship qualities, and sibling relationship qualities changed before versus the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants included one parent and two adolescent-aged children from 682 families (2,046 participants). Parents and youth participating in an ongoing longitudinal study in five Midwestern states in the United States completed an additional web-based assessment of family processes and family relationship qualities during the May-June 2020 pandemic-related shutdowns. A series of two-wave latent change score models indicated that family chaos increased with the onset of pandemic-related shutdowns and that the level of chaos within a family during the shutdowns had implications for changes in several parenting processes and family relationship qualities. Specifically, higher levels of family chaos during the pandemic mitigated observed increases in parental knowledge and were associated with declines in parental autonomy granting. Family chaos during pandemic-related shutdowns also was associated with increases in maternal-child conflict, paternal-child conflict, and sibling conflict as well as decreases in paternal-child intimacy, sibling intimacy, and sibling disclosure. Overall, consistent with a family stress perspective, the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic was associated with increased strain and commotion within many households, and these changes had implications for multiple family relationships. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2021
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18. Integrating Theories of Gender and Sexuality With Deviance: The Case of Prescription Drug Misuse during Sex
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Brian C. Kelly, Mike Vuolo, and Laura C. Frizzell
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Gender Studies ,Sociology and Political Science ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Prescription Drug Misuse ,050903 gender studies ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Human sexuality ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,Deviance (sociology) ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Social scientists have expended substantial effort to identify group patterns of deviant behavior. Yet beyond the ill-conceived treatment of sexual minorities as inherently deviant, they have rarely considered how gendered sexual identities (GSIs) shape participation in deviance. We argue for the utility of centering theories of gender and sexuality in intersectional deviance research. We demonstrate how this intentional focus on gender and sexuality provides important empirical insights while avoiding past pitfalls of stigmatizing sexual minorities. Drawing on theories of hegemonic masculinity, emphasized femininity, and minority stress together with criminological general strain theory, we demonstrate how societal expectations and constraints generate strains among GSI groups that may lead to distinctly patterned deviance, using the case of prescription drug misuse during sex. We employ thematic analysis of 120 in-depth interviews with people who misuse prescription drugs, stratified by GSI. We identify six themes highlighting distinct pathways from strain to misuse during sex for different GSI groups: intimacy management, achieving sexual freedom, regulating sexual mood, performance confidence, increased sense of control, and managing sexual identity conflict. In this article, we demonstrate the empirical and theoretical importance of centering gender and sexuality in deviance research and provide a roadmap for theoretical integration.
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- 2021
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19. Pediatric drug overdose mortality: contextual and policy effects for children under 12 years
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Brian C. Kelly, Mike Vuolo, and Laura C. Frizzell
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Mortality rate ,Good Samaritan law ,Public welfare ,United States ,Article ,Pediatric drug ,Analgesics, Opioid ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Intervention (counseling) ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Drug Overdose ,Child ,business ,Socioeconomic status ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
BACKGROUND We determine trends in fatal pediatric drug overdose from 1999 to 2018 and describe the influence of contextual factors and policies on such overdoses. METHODS Combining restricted CDC mortality files with data from other sources, we conducted between-county multilevel models to examine associations of demographic and socioeconomic characteristics with pediatric overdose mortality and a fixed-effects analysis to identify how changes in contexts and policies over time shaped county-level fatal pediatric overdoses per 100,000 children under 12 years. RESULTS Pediatric overdose deaths rose from 0.08/100,000 children in 1999 to a peak of 0.19/100,000 children in 2016, with opioids accounting for an increasing proportion of deaths. Spatial patterns of pediatric overdose deaths are heterogenous. Socioeconomic characteristics are not associated with between-county differences in pediatric overdose mortality. Greater state expenditures on public welfare (B = -0.099; CI: [-0.193, -0.005]) and hospitals (B = -0.222; CI: [-.437, -.007]) were associated with lower pediatric overdose mortality. In years when a Good Samaritan law was in effect, the county-level pediatric overdose rate was lower (B = -0.095; CI: [-0.177, -0.013]). CONCLUSIONS Pediatric overdose mortality increased since 1999, peaking in 2016. Good Samaritan laws and investment in hospitals and public welfare may temper pediatric overdoses. Multi-faceted approaches using policy and individual intervention is necessary to reduce pediatric overdose mortality. IMPACT Pediatric fatalities from psychoactive substances have risen within the U.S. since 1999. Higher levels of state spending on public welfare and hospitals are significantly associated with lower pediatric overdose mortality rates. The implementation of Good Samaritan laws is significantly associated with lower pediatric overdose mortality rates. We identified no county-level sociodemographic factors associated with pediatric overdose mortality. The findings indicate that a multi-faceted approach to the reduction of pediatric overdose is necessary.
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- 2021
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20. Policy Brief
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Mike Vuolo, Laura C. Frizzell, and Brian C. Kelly
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Social Psychology ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Humans - Published
- 2022
21. Changes in substance use among HIV-negative MSM: A longitudinal analysis, 1995-2019
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Brian C. Kelly, Liza Coyer, Sarah A. Mustillo, Maria Prins, Udi Davidovich, Sociale Psychologie (Psychologie, FMG), Psychology Other Research (FMG), Graduate School, AII - Infectious diseases, APH - Global Health, APH - Methodology, and Infectious diseases
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Risk ,Male ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Health Policy ,N-Methyl-3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine ,Sexual Behavior ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Drugs ,HIV Infections ,Cohort Studies ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Risk-Taking ,Cocaine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,MSM ,Trends ,Homosexuality, Male ,Alcohol ,Cannabis - Abstract
Background Research suggests shifting patterns of recreational drug consumption among MSM in recent decades. The present study evaluates population-level mean trajectories of substance use among HIV-negative MSM from 1995 to 2019. Methods Using open cohort study data following MSM in the Netherlands (n=1495) since 1995, we applied generalized estimating equations to examine population-averaged estimates of five substances – alcohol, cannabis, ecstasy, cocaine, and poppers – from 1995 to 2019, as well as their use during sexual encounters. Results Recent alcohol use decreased; predicted probabilities declined from 1995 to 2019 (.96 to .87). During the same period, cocaine and poppers use increased – (.10 to .23 and .37 to .47, respectively) and use during sex also increased (.05 to .16, and .32 to .41, respectively). Ecstasy use increased over time (.23 to .38), although not during sex. No significant changes in cannabis use occurred. Conclusions While changes in use of various substances were mixed, increases in cocaine and poppers use during sexual encounters occurred among HIV-negative MSM over time. Efforts to intervene on substance use in connection with sex remain critical for health promotion.
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- 2022
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22. Impact of cigarette package warnings on attitudes towards sharing and gifting cigarettes in China: a nationwide study of smokers and non-smokers
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Brian C. Kelly, Ann McNeill, Joanna E. Cohen, Jinsong Tang, and Yanhui Liao
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Adult ,Consumption (economics) ,China ,Health (social science) ,business.industry ,Smoking ,education ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Advertising ,Non-Smokers ,Tobacco Products ,Public opinion ,humanities ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Humans ,Packaging and labeling ,Surveillance and monitoring ,business ,Psychology ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
BackgroundSharing and gifting cigarettes are common in China. These social practices promote cigarette consumption, and consequently may reduce quit rates in China. This study investigated sharing and gifting cigarettes, and the relationship of observing pictorial health warnings to attitudes towards sharing and gifting cigarettes in China.MethodsWe conducted an online nationwide cross-sectional study of 9818 adults in China. Experiences of sharing and gifting cigarettes, and attitudes towards sharing and gifting cigarettes before and after viewing text and pictorial health warnings on the packages were assessed, and compared between smokers and non-smokers.ResultsMost current smokers reported experiences of sharing (97%) and gifting (around 90%) cigarettes. Less than half of non-smokers reported sharing cigarettes and receiving gifted cigarettes, but over half (61.4%) gave cigarettes as a gift to others. More than half of non-smokers but less than 10% of smokers disagreed with sharing and gifting cigarettes. After observing both text and pictorial health warnings on the packages, disagreement with sharing and gifting cigarettes increased by more than 10 percentage points among both smokers and non-smokers.ConclusionHaving pictorial health warnings on cigarette packages may reduce sharing and gifting cigarettes in China.
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- 2021
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23. Beliefs on COVID-19 Among Electronic Cigarette Users: Behavioral Responses and Implications for COVID Prevention and E-Cigarette Interventions
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Mike Vuolo, Mark Pawson, and Brian C. Kelly
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,030505 public health ,Health (social science) ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Psychological intervention ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Environmental health ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Electronic cigarette - Abstract
E-cigarette users’ beliefs about COVID-19 may shape their responses to the pandemic and their e-cigarette consumption. A U.S. national cross-sectional survey of 562 e-cigarette users was conducted in April 2020. Participants self-reported nicotine consumption, COVID-19 beliefs, beliefs about e-cigarettes, social distancing, COVID-19 disruptions, cessation considerations, and individual characteristics. Ordinary least squares (OLS) regression provided unstandardized, and standardized coefficients. Frequency of e-cigarette use is inversely associated with beliefs COVID-19 is relevant (β = −0.215). Beliefs e-cigarettes are addictive, harmful, or pose a risk to future health were positively associated with beliefs COVID-19 is relevant (β = 0.171; β = 0.164; β = 0.203), beliefs the media are truthful on COVID-19 (β = 0.133; β = 0.136; β = 0.137), and beliefs e-cigarette users are at greater risk (β = 0.279; β = 0.411; β = 0.447). All three COVID-19 beliefs (COVID relevant; media truthful; and greater risk) were positively associated with social distancing (β = 0.307; β = 0.259; β = 0.115), work disruptions (β = 0.134; β = 0.135; β = 0.130), family disruptions (β = 0.232; β = 0.131; β = 0.164), friendship disruptions (β = 0.214; β = 0.139; β = 0.133), and considerations of quitting (β = 0.250; β = 0.222; β = 0.620). Strong associations between e-cigarette beliefs and COVID-19 beliefs exist. COVID-19 beliefs are associated with behavioral responses, such as social distancing and considerations of e-cigarette cessation. Interventions may be able to leverage COVID-19 beliefs to reduce e-cigarette consumption or promote cessation during the pandemic.
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- 2020
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24. Peer Association and Routine Activities in Sex Worker Patronage among Male Migrant Workers
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Xiaozhao Yousef Yang, Brian C. Kelly, and Tingzhong Yang
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Focus (computing) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Migrant workers ,050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,Sex workers ,Developmental psychology ,Clinical Psychology ,Personality factors ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0509 other social sciences ,Association (psychology) ,Psychology ,Law ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Studies of people who buy sex often focus on psychological and personality factors with less attention paid to the role of social contexts. This study integrates the two lines of inquiry, routine a...
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- 2020
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25. Associations Between E-Cigarettes and Subsequent Cocaine Use in Adolescence: An Analysis of the UK Millennium Cohort Study
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Constanza P Silva, Jennifer L Maggs, Brian C Kelly, Mike Vuolo, and Jeremy Staff
- Subjects
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health - Abstract
Introduction Nicotine exposure via early combustible cigarette smoking can prime the adolescent brain for subsequent cocaine use. However, there is limited evidence whether e-cigarette use, a nicotine delivery system that is increasingly popular among youth, is associated with later cocaine use. We examine the association between e-cigarette use by the age of 14 years and cocaine use by the age of 17 years. Aims and Methods The Millennium Cohort Study is a nationally representative sample of 18 552 9-month-old children born between September 2000 and January 2002 in the United Kingdom. Follow-up interviews and surveys were collected from children and their caregivers at modal ages 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 14, and 17 years. Our analytic sample included 340 youth who had used e-cigarettes by age 14 years (exposure variable), matched using coarsened exact matching, to 4867 nicotine naïve youth on childhood common liability confounders and demographics measured from infancy to age 11. The outcome was cocaine use by the modal age of 17 years. Results Of the 5207 successfully matched youth, 7.6% of adolescent e-cigarette users by age 14 years used cocaine by age 17 years versus 3.1% of non-e-cigarette users. Multivariable logistic regression in the matched sample indicated that e-cigarette use by age 14 years was associated with 2.7 times higher odds of cocaine use by age 17 years (95% CI, 1.75 to 4.28). Conclusions These findings in a UK sample showed that e-cigarette use in early adolescence is associated with higher odds of cocaine use later in adolescence, similar to risks posed by tobacco cigarette smoking. Implications In this large-scale prospective cohort study (n = 5207), youth who had used e-cigarettes by the age of 14 years were matched to nicotine naïve youth on childhood common liability confounders and demographics measured from infancy to age 11 years (e.g. school engagement, risk-taking propensity, delinquency, peer and parental smoking, parental educational attainment). After matching, 7.6% of age 14 years e-cigarette users had subsequently used cocaine by the age of 17 years versus 3.1% of non-e-cigarette users. Although e-cigarettes are promoted as a strategy for nicotine-dependent users to reduce the harms of combustible cigarettes, the evidence here suggests that for nicotine naïve youth, they may increase the risk of subsequent cocaine use.
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- 2022
26. E-cigarette use among early adolescent tobacco cigarette smokers: testing the disruption and entrenchment hypotheses in two longitudinal cohorts
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Brian C Kelly, Mike Vuolo, Jennifer Maggs, and Jeremy Staff
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Health (social science) ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health - Abstract
ObjectiveUsing longitudinal data from two large-scale cohorts in the UK and USA, we examine whether e-cigarette use steers adolescent early smokers away from tobacco cigarettes (disruption hypothesis) or deepens early patterns of tobacco smoking (entrenchment hypothesis) in comparison with early smokers who do not use e-cigarettes.MethodsYouth who smoked tobacco cigarettes by early adolescence (before age 15) were selected from the ongoing UK Millennium Cohort Study (n=1090) and the US Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (n=803) study. In regression models, the focal predictor was lifetime use of an e-cigarette by early adolescence and the primary outcome was current tobacco use by late adolescence (before age 18). Logistic and multinomial models controlled for early adolescent risk factors and sociodemographic background, and were weighted for attrition and adjusted for complex survey designs.ResultsAmong youth who were early cigarette smokers, 57% of UK and 58% of US youth also used e-cigarettes. The odds of later adolescent smoking among early smoking youth were significantly higher among e-cigarette users relative to those who had not used e-cigarettes (adjusted OR (AORUK)=1.45; AORUSA=2.19). In both samples, multinomial models indicated that early smoking youth who used e-cigarettes were more likely to be frequent smokers relative to not smoking (AORUK=2.01; AORUSA=5.11) and infrequent smoking (AORUK=1.67; AORUSA=2.11).ConclusionsDespite national differences in e-cigarette regulation and marketing, there is evidence e-cigarette use among early adolescent smokers in the UK and USA leads to higher odds of any smoking and more frequent tobacco cigarette use later in adolescence.
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- 2023
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27. Surveillance, Self-Governance, and Mortality: The Impact of Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs on U.S. Overdose Mortality, 2000-2016
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Mike Vuolo, Laura C. Frizzell, and Brian C. Kelly
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Analgesics, Opioid ,Benzodiazepines ,Social Psychology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Humans ,Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs ,Drug Overdose ,United States - Abstract
Policy mechanisms shaping population health take numerous forms, from behavioral prohibitions to mandates for action to surveillance. Rising drug overdoses undermined the state’s ability to promote population-level health. Using the case of prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs), we contend that PDMP implementation highlights state biopower operating via mechanisms of surveillance, whereby prescribers, pharmacists, and patients perceive agency despite choices being constrained. We consider whether such surveillance mechanisms are sufficient or if prescriber/dispenser access or requirements for use are necessary for population health impact. We test whether PDMPs reduced overdose mortality while considering that surveillance may require time to reach effectiveness. PDMPs reduced opioid overdose mortality 2 years postimplementation and sustained effects, with similar effects for prescription opioids, benzodiazepines, and psychostimulants. Access or mandates for action do not reduce mortality beyond surveillance. Overall, PDMP effects on overdose mortality are likely due to self-regulation under surveillance rather than mandated action.
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- 2022
28. Associations between older siblings’ substance use and younger siblings’ substance use intentions: Indirect effects via substance use expectations
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Sahitya, Maiya, Shawn D, Whiteman, Sarfaraz, Serang, Jenna C, Dayley, Jennifer L, Maggs, Sarah A, Mustillo, and Brian C, Kelly
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Male ,Motivation ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Siblings ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Intention ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Middle Aged ,Toxicology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Adolescent Behavior ,Humans ,Sibling Relations ,Female ,Cannabis - Abstract
We examined the direct and indirect effects of older siblings' substance use behaviors (i.e., cannabis and e-cigarettes) on younger siblings' later substance use intentions via their substance use expectations.Data were collected from 682 families (N = 2,046) with two adolescent siblings (older siblings: M age = 15.67 years, 51% female; younger siblings: M age = 13.14 years, 48% female) and one parent (M age = 45.15 years; 85% female). Participants completed annual online surveys at two occasions. Older siblings reported on their cannabis and e-cigarette use frequencies (Time 1) and younger siblings reported on their substance use expectations (Time 1) and intentions (Time 1 and 2); parents reported on adolescents' sociodemographic characteristics and their own substance use (Time 2).Structural equation modeling results suggested that older siblings' cannabis and e-cigarette use was indirectly related to younger siblings' later intentions to use these substances through their positive expectations about substances, after accounting for younger siblings' earlier intentions to use substances and control variables including parents' and friends' use. There were no significant direct relations between older siblings' cannabis or e-cigarette use and younger siblings' intentions to use them.Findings indicate that older siblings are critical and unique socialization agents of younger siblings' expectations and intentions to use substances. Intervention and prevention programs that target adolescents' substance use should consider the ways in which siblings shape each other's substance use.
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- 2023
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29. Studying perceived needs for information on maternal and infant health care in the puerperium period among fathers of newborns in China
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Brian C. Kelly, Binqian Ge, Qian Shen, Yuanyuan Mo, Shen-Xian Wan, Jichuan Wang, Huiling Li, and Wei Wang
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Adult ,Male ,China ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Child Health Services ,Information Seeking Behavior ,Population ,Breastfeeding ,Psychological intervention ,Information needs ,Fathers ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Maternity and Midwifery ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Maternal Health Services ,education ,Response rate (survey) ,education.field_of_study ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,030504 nursing ,business.industry ,Postpartum Period ,Infant, Newborn ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Latent class model ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Family medicine ,Perception ,Residence ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Psychology - Abstract
Objective The objective of this study is to understand the perceived needs for information on maternal and infant healthcare during the puerperium among the fathers of newborns in China, and to examine factors that are associated with the patterns of perceived needs. Design A cross-sectional study was conducted. Methods A survey was conducted in the obstetrics department of the First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University in Suzhou, China. A total of 206 fathers of newborns were interviewed with a response rate of 98.1%. Latent class analysis (LCA) was used to identify a priori unknown patterns of perceived needs for information (knowledge/skills) on maternal and infant healthcare during the puerperium period. Chi-square tests were applied to examine factors associated with such patterns of needs. Results The majority of the participants perceived strong needs for information on maternal and infant healthcare during the puerperium. LCA identified three latent classes on perceived needs for information on maternal healthcare among Chinese fathers of newborns: Class 1 - Low: Some Infant Health Related Needs; Class 2 - Moderate: Lower Physical Recovery Needs; and Class 3 - High: Enthusiastic Needs. Similarly, three latent classes were identified for perceived needs for information on infant health care: Class 1 - Low: Some Medical Needs; Class 2 - Moderate: Lower Breastfeeding Needs; and Class 3 - High: Enthusiastic Needs. Fathers aged 30 to 35, urban residents, and those with higher education were more likely to be in the Enthusiastic Needs groups for information needs for both maternal and infant healthcare. Conclusions Perceived needs for information on maternal and infant healthcare are widespread among fathers of newborns in China. Three distinct latent classes for perceived needs for information (knowledge/skills) on maternal and infant health were identified in this population. Socio-demographics, such as age, residence, and education, were significantly associated with such patterns of needs. The findings have implications for the development of interventions to improve maternal and infant healthcare in China.
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- 2019
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30. Moving Upstream: The Effect of Tobacco Clean Air Restrictions on Educational Inequalities in Smoking Among Young Adults
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Brian C. Kelly, Mike Vuolo, Laura C. Frizzell, and Elaine M. Hernandez
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychological intervention ,Article ,Cigarette Smoking ,Smoking behavior ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Environmental health ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Young adult ,Child ,Demography ,media_common ,Upstream (petroleum industry) ,030505 public health ,Health Policy ,United States ,Educational attainment ,Health equity ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Educational Status ,Life course approach ,Female ,Tobacco Smoke Pollution ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology - Abstract
Education affords a range of direct and indirect benefits that promote longer and healthier lives and stratify health lifestyles. We use tobacco clean air policies to examine whether policies that apply universally—interventions that bypass individuals’ unequal access and ability to employ flexible resources to avoid health hazards—have an effect on educational inequalities in health behaviors. We test theoretically informed but competing hypotheses that these policies either amplify or attenuate the association between education and smoking behavior. Our results provide evidence that interventions that move upstream to apply universally regardless of individual educational attainment—here, tobacco clean air policies—are particularly effective among young adults with the lowest levels of parental or individual educational attainment. These findings provide important evidence that upstream approaches may disrupt persistent educational inequalities in health behaviors. In doing so, they provide opportunities to intervene on behaviors in early adulthood that contribute to disparities in morbidity and mortality later in the life course. These findings also help assuage concerns that tobacco clean air policies increase educational inequalities in smoking by stigmatizing those with the fewest resources.
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- 2019
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31. Vaping in a Time of Pandemics: Risk Perception and Motivations for Electronic Cigarette Use
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Xiaozhao Yousef Yang, Brian C Kelly, Mark Pawson, and Michael Vuolo
- Subjects
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health - Abstract
Introduction Prior studies on the association between the intensity of and motives for vaping e-cigarettes have highlighted the psychological dynamics of motivational changes, but less about how vaping motives may shift as a function of risk perceptions exacerbated by unanticipated events. This study frames the COVID-19 pandemic as an exacerbating threat to pulmonary health, and tests how e-cigarette users’ risk perceptions of COVID-19 are related to different motives for vaping and ultimately the intensity of e-cigarette use. Aims and Methods An online survey of e-cigarette users in the United States (n = 562) was conducted during April 2020 when much of the United States was under “lockdown” conditions. We distinguished three types of vaping motives (health, socialization, and dependence) and established the classification with confirmatory factor analysis. Structural equation modeling was conducted for path analyses and mediation tests. Results All three vaping motives were significantly associated with greater use intensity. A heightened risk perception of e-cigarette users’ vulnerability to COVID-19 was inversely associated with use intensity (−.18, p < .01) and health motives for vaping (−.27, p < .001), but not associated with socialization and dependence motivations. Health motives for vaping mediated 35% of the association between COVID-19 risk perceptions and use intensity. Conclusions Our findings indicate that risk perceptions of exacerbated threats may reduce e-cigarette use directly, and also indirectly through shifting certain types of motivations for vaping. Beyond elucidating the relational dynamics between vaping psychology and health risks, these results also indicate health professionals may leverage the pandemic to promote nicotine cessation or reduced use. Implication Little is known about how vaping motives shift after unanticipated events such as pandemics. This study contributes to knowledge of how the use of e-cigarettes is motivated by different dimensions of rationales and exogenous risks. Exploiting the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic, we found risk perceptions are associated with the intensity of e-cigarette use indirectly specifically through health motivations. Risk perceptions are not associated with socialization and dependence motives for vaping.
- Published
- 2021
32. Further Consideration of the Impact of Tobacco Control Policies on Young Adult Smoking in Light of the Liberalization of Cannabis Policies
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Sadé L. Lindsay, Brian C. Kelly, and Mike Vuolo
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Consumption (economics) ,biology ,Liberalization ,Adolescent ,Tobacco control ,Smoking ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Original Investigations ,Marijuana Smoking ,Fixed effects model ,Tobacco Products ,biology.organism_classification ,Affect (psychology) ,Young Adult ,Smoke-Free Policy ,Environmental health ,Tobacco ,Humans ,Cannabis ,Business ,National Longitudinal Surveys ,Young adult - Abstract
Introduction Changing patterns of cannabis consumption related to the liberalization of cannabis policies may have a countervailing effect on tobacco use. We analyzed whether cannabis policies have tempered the effects of tobacco control policies as well as the extent to which they were associated with young adult cigarette smoking. Aims and Methods Combining data on tobacco and cannabis policies at the state, county, and city levels with the nationally-representative geocoded National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 and Census data, we use multilevel regression and fixed effect analyses to examine the impact of cannabis policies on any past 30-day cigarette smoking, frequency of smoking, and past 30-day near-daily smoking among young adults while accounting for community and individual covariates. Results Tobacco control policies, including significant effects of comprehensive smoking bans, total vending machine restrictions, single cigarette sale restrictions, and advertising restrictions, remain robust in reducing young adult smoking, net of cannabis policy liberalization, including the legal status of possession, penalties for sale, and medical cannabis. Cannabis policies do not directly affect young adult smoking patterns in an adverse way. Conclusions This paper provides evidence that the liberalization of cannabis laws has not adversely affected the efficacy of tobacco control efforts. Implications While the effects of tobacco control policies on smoking are well-established, little research has considered how the liberalization of cannabis policies may affect these relationships, which is important given the co-use of these substances. This paper provides evidence that the liberalization of cannabis laws has not adversely affected tobacco control efforts.
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- 2021
33. Trends in Psychotropic-Drug-Implicated Mortality: Psychotropic Drugs as a Contributing But Non-Underlying Cause of Death
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Mike Vuolo, Brian C. Kelly, and Laura C. Frizzell
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Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population health ,Disease ,Toxicology ,Drug overdose ,Article ,Intervention (counseling) ,Cause of Death ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Mortality ,Cause of death ,media_common ,Pharmacology ,Psychotropic Drugs ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Years of potential life lost ,Psychotropic drug ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Emergency medicine ,Drug Overdose ,business - Abstract
Background Drug overdoses have contributed to considerable years of life lost. However, focusing solely on drug overdoses, whereby drug poisoning defines the underlying cause of death, obscures the wider burden of the drug mortality crisis. We aim to describe 21 years of trends in “psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths,” those where psychotropic drugs are a contributing (but not the underlying) cause of death. Methods We analyze deaths extracted from CDC WONDER from 1999−2019 to generate annual counts and rates for psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths in the United States, including by underlying cause of death and drug implicated. Results Over 21 years, 51,446 psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths occurred (33,885 medical; 17,561 external). Both medical and external psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths rose dramatically, increasing 2.5 and 5.0 times, respectively. Diseases of the circulatory system predominated underlying causes of medical deaths (74 %). Non-drug suicide, transport accidents, and drownings constitute 54 % of external underlying causes. Among the various underlying causes of death, psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths represent a considerable proportion, especially among external causes, with the proportion greatly increasing over the observation period. The drug implicated evolves from cocaine to opioids to psychostimulants, with the latter rising considerably. Conclusions The drug mortality crisis extends beyond overdose and may temper improvements observed within other causes of mortality, such as cardiovascular disease, transport accidents, and drownings. As with overdoses, psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths have risen dramatically during the 21st century. They include striking increases for drugs, such as psychostimulants, receiving less attention with overdoses. Research is needed to address prevention, intervention, and policy for psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths beyond overdose mortality.
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- 2021
34. Adolescent electronic cigarette use and tobacco smoking in the Millennium Cohort Study
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Mike Vuolo, Jennifer L. Maggs, Jeremy Staff, and Brian C. Kelly
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Pregnancy ,Adolescent ,business.industry ,Vaping ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Odds ratio ,Tobacco Products ,Youth smoking ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,medicine.disease ,Logistic regression ,Confidence interval ,Odds ,Cigarette Smoking ,Cohort Studies ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Millennium Cohort Study (United States) ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,business ,Child ,Demography - Abstract
Aims To evaluate the catalyst, diversion and common liability hypotheses by examining associations between e-cigarette use and tobacco cigarette smoking at modal ages 14 and 17 years, controlling for adolescent and infancy risk factors. Design Intergenerational, prospective cohort data from the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS). Nationally representative sample of infants born September 2000 to January, 2002. Setting United Kingdom. Participants Parent and child data from 10 625 youth assessed in infancy and modal ages 11, 14 and 17 years. Measurements Age 14 and 17 e-cigarette and combustible cigarette use (recency, frequency). Potential confounders were age 11 risk factors (e.g. alcohol use, externalizing behaviors, parental tobacco use, permissiveness), infancy risk factors (e.g. maternal smoking during pregnancy, smoke exposure in infancy) and demographic characteristics. Findings Among youth who had not smoked tobacco by age 14 (n = 9046), logistic regressions estimated that teenagers who used e-cigarettes by age 14 compared with non-e-cigarette users, had more than five times higher odds of initiating tobacco smoking by age 17 [odds ratio (OR) = 5.25, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 3.28-8.38] and nearly triple the odds of being a frequent tobacco smoker at age 17 (OR = 2.91, 95% CI = 1.56-5.41), net of risk factors and demographics. Among youth who had not used e-cigarettes by age 14 (n = 9078), teenagers who had smoked tobacco cigarettes by age 14 had three times higher odds of initiating e-cigarettes by age 17 (OR = 2.98, 95% CI = 1.74-5.09) compared with non-tobacco smokers and nearly three times higher odds of frequently using e-cigarettes at age 17 (OR = 2.90, 95% CI = 1.21-6.95), net of confounders. Similar links between e-cigarette and tobacco cigarette use were observed in regressions following coarsened exact matching. Conclusions E-cigarette use by age 14 is associated with increased odds of tobacco cigarette initiation and frequent smoking at age 17 among British youth. Similarly, tobacco smoking at age 14 is associated with increased odds of both e-cigarette initiation and frequent use at age 17.
- Published
- 2021
35. Parents Who First Allowed Adolescents to Drink Alcohol in a Family Context During Spring 2020 COVID-19 Emergency Shutdowns
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Brian C. Kelly, Sarah A. Mustillo, Shawn D. Whiteman, Jennifer L. Maggs, and Jenna R. Cassinat
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Parents ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Longitudinal study ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Adolescent ,Alcohol Drinking ,Shutdown ,Context (language use) ,Underage Drinking ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health ,Psychiatry ,Drink alcohol ,Heavy drinking ,Parenting ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,COVID-19 ,Adolescent alcohol ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Adolescent Behavior ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Psychology - Abstract
Purpose COVID-19 stay-at-home orders during Spring 2020 dramatically changed daily life and created significant challenges for families. We document levels and predictors of U.S. parents who newly allowed adolescents to drink alcohol at home during the shutdown. Methods Participants in an ongoing longitudinal study were two adolescent siblings (N = 911, M = 14.43, SD = 1.54 years) and one parent (N = 456; 85% mothers) who provided self-report data before the pandemic (T1) and during the shutdown. Results No parents permitted adolescent drinking with family at T1; nearly one in six allowed it during the shutdown. In full models, adolescents who previously drank (without permission) and had light or heavy drinking parents were more likely to be newly permitted to drink. Conclusions Parents’ alcohol permissibility within family contexts changed during the pandemic and was shaped by both parent and adolescent drinking. Well-child visits should continue adolescent alcohol screening and parent support during and after the pandemic.
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- 2021
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36. Developing Explanatory Models for Life Course Shifts in the Burden of Substance Use to Inform Future Policy and Practice
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Brian C. Kelly and Mike Vuolo
- Subjects
Adult ,Inequality ,Drug related mortality ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,media_common.quotation_subject ,030508 substance abuse ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Context (language use) ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,Forgetting ,Public economics ,Divergence (linguistics) ,Health Policy ,Reproducibility of Results ,United States ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Policy ,Cohort ,Life course approach ,Substance use ,Drug Overdose ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology - Abstract
Past approaches to policy and practice for substance use have focused heavily on young people, but recent trends indicate this approach may not be where the future lies. The crises with escalating overdose mortality in several countries, particularly overdoses related to opioids, have drawn attention to life course shifts in the burdens of substance use. Overdose mortality rates for individuals in midlife have considerably outpaced those of adolescents and individuals in early adulthood. These diverging life course trends are occurring not only in the United States, but in other countries with growing overdose problems as well. The future of effective policy and practice depend upon evidence and analyses that adapt to emerging data on shifting life course trends in drug related mortality. Within this manuscript, we consider a range of theoretical possibilities on the divergence of midlife drug mortality trends from those of young people for the purpose of outlining an agenda for future research and practice. Specifically, we consider the following theoretical approaches to move research forward in this area: Changes in Medical Context hypothesis; Emergent Comorbidities hypothesis; Cohort hypothesis; Generational Forgetting hypothesis; Legal Regulation hypothesis; Strength of Life Course Bonds hypothesis; Deepening Inequality hypothesis; Measurement Reliability hypothesis. These theoretical frameworks attend specifically to the overdose crisis but extend to other aspects of substance use. Beyond setting an agenda for research by providing empirically verifiable hypotheses, this manuscript also identifies future directions in policy and practice that are attentive to life course trends.
- Published
- 2021
37. Standard units for cannabis dose : why is it important to standardize cannabis dose for drug policy and how can we enhance its place on the public health agenda?
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Brian C. Kelly, Fleur Braddick, Marcin Wojnar, Moritz Rosenkranz, Pablo Guzman, Silvia Matrai, Mercè Balcells-Oliveró, Geert Dom, Eugènia Campeny, Chandni Hindocha, Julian Vicente, Jakob Manthey, Zoe Swithenbank, Valentina Lorenzetti, Nienke Liebregts, Mike Vuolo, Olga S Cruz, Maria Teresa Pons, Daniel Feingold, Hugo López-Pelayo, Paolo Deluca, João Matias, Matthijs G. Bossong, Luc van Deurse, Tom P. Freeman, Jürgen Rehm, Clara Oliveras, and Antoni Gual
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Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,MEDLINE ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Public Policy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,RA0421 ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychiatry ,media_common ,Cannabis ,biology ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Public health ,biology.organism_classification ,Legislation, Drug ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Hallucinogens ,Public Health ,Human medicine ,business ,RA ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
No abstract available.
- Published
- 2021
38. COVID-19 Mask Requirements as a Workers' Rights Issue: Parallels to Smoking Bans
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Brian C. Kelly, Vincent J. Roscigno, and Mike Vuolo
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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Epidemiology ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Criminology ,Article ,Smoke-Free Policy ,Betacoronavirus ,Political science ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,Humans ,Workplace ,Parallels ,Pandemics ,Social Responsibility ,Rights issue ,biology ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Masks ,COVID-19 ,biology.organism_classification ,Communicable Disease Control ,Tobacco Smoke Pollution ,Public Health ,Coronavirus Infections ,Social responsibility - Published
- 2020
39. Direct and indirect effects of maternal and sibling intimacy on adolescents’ volunteering via social responsibility values: A longitudinal study
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Sahitya Maiya, Shawn D. Whiteman, Jenna C. Dayley, Sarfaraz Serang, Laura Wray-Lake, Brian C. Kelly, Jennifer L. Maggs, and Sarah A. Mustillo
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Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Communication ,Developmental and Educational Psychology - Abstract
This study investigates the direct and indirect effects of maternal and sibling relational intimacy on adolescents’ volunteering behaviors via their social responsibility values. Participants included two adolescents (50% female; M age = 1 year) and one parent (85% female; M age = 45 years) from 682 families ( N = 2046) from an ongoing longitudinal study. Adolescents self-reported their intimacy with mothers and siblings (Time 1), social responsibility values (Time 1), and volunteering (Times 1 and 2); parents reported on sociodemographic characteristics (i.e., gender, birth order, and family income). Results from a structural equation model indicated that after accounting for adolescents’ earlier volunteering, both maternal and sibling intimacy were indirectly related to greater volunteering via social responsibility values. There were no significant direct effects from maternal or sibling intimacy to adolescents’ volunteering. Results indicate that both mothers and siblings are important in socializing prosocial and civic values and behaviors during adolescence.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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40. Electronic cigarette use in adolescence is associated with later cannabis use
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Jeremy, Staff, Mike, Vuolo, Brian C, Kelly, Jennifer L, Maggs, and Constanza P, Silva
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Pharmacology ,Adolescent ,Vaping ,Tobacco Products ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Toxicology ,Cigarette Smoking ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Child, Preschool ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Cannabis - Abstract
Research is needed to determine whether e-cigarette use during adolescence is associated with higher odds of subsequent cannabis use, net of tobacco cigarette use and childhood confounders.Multivariable logistic regressions predicting using cannabis by age 17 based upon prospective, intergenerational data from 10,251 youth in a nationally representative UK birth cohort followed from infancy who had not used cannabis by age 14. The focal predictor is e-cigarette use by age 14 in the context of the potential confounder tobacco cigarette use. Regressions include sociodemographic background and risk factors assessed at age 11 (e.g., alcohol initiation, problem behaviors, parental and peer smoking) and during early childhood (e.g., maternal smoking during pregnancy, parental substance use).Youth use of e-cigarettes by age 14 was associated with 2.8 times higher odds of subsequent cannabis use by age 17 [OR 2.75; 95% CI 1.82,4.15], net of tobacco cigarette smoking and childhood confounders. Similarly, use of e-cigarettes by age 14 was associated with 2.5 times higher odds [OR 2.46; 95% CI 1.48,4.08] of frequent cannabis use at age 17 (10 times in prior year). If youth used both e-cigarettes and tobacco cigarettes by age 14, the probabilities of cannabis initiation were 75% and of frequent use was 25% by age 17, compared to probabilities of 23% and 6%, respectively, among youth who had used neither product.Findings add to accumulating evidence that adolescent e-cigarette use is associated with higher odds of later cannabis initiation and frequent use, independent of tobacco cigarette use.
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- 2022
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41. College-based social and situational predictors of real-time prescription drug misuse in daily life
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Lauren M. Papp, Shari M. Blumenstock, Chrystyna D. Kouros, and Brian C. Kelly
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Evening ,Universities ,Prescription Drug Misuse ,Substance-Related Disorders ,education ,Population ,Toxicology ,Article ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Situational ethics ,Medical prescription ,Students ,Psychiatry ,Pharmacology ,education.field_of_study ,Multilevel model ,Social environment ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Anxiety ,Central Nervous System Stimulants ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
Background This study examined social and situational context predictors of prescription drug misuse among college-students at a large public university in the Midwest. Social and situational context predictors considered were hour of the day, weekend vs weekday, whether participants were at home or another place, and who they were with during instances of misuse. Salient social events, including home football games, city-regulated parties, and the 2019 Midwest polar vortex were also recorded. Method Using ecological momentary assessment methodology, 297 students completed momentary reports for 28 days. Participants indicated whether they had misused prescription medication (sedatives or sleeping pills, tranquilizers or anxiety medications, stimulants, and pain relievers) and reported on their social and situational context in the moment of misuse. Results Multilevel modeling indicated that participants were more likely to misuse prescription medication earlier in the day vs. the evening, on weekdays vs. weekends, when at home vs. not at home, and while alone vs. with others. Conclusions This study provides descriptive information on the social context in which prescription drug misuse is most likely to occur among college students. Our findings suggest that social and situational contexts of prescription drug misuse likely differ as compared to other substances (e.g., alcohol) among college students. Further research aimed at identifying momentary predictors of prescription drug misuse in this population is warranted.
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- 2021
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42. Marijuana’s Moral Entrepreneurs, Then and Now
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Brian C. Kelly, Joy Kadowaki, and Mike Vuolo
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Law ,Political science ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Rhetoric ,050501 criminology ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,0505 law ,Water Science and Technology ,media_common - Abstract
comparing more than eight decades of anti-marijuana rhetoric shows how both anti-drug crusader harry j. anslinger and current attorney general jeff sessions fashioned themselves into national-level moral entrepreneurs.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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43. Nightlife scene involvement and patterns of prescription drug misuse
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Brian C. Kelly and Mike Vuolo
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Health (social science) ,Prescription drug ,Prescription Drugs ,Prescription Drug Misuse ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,030508 substance abuse ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Logistic regression ,Rate ratio ,Social Environment ,Peer Group ,Odds ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,Nightlife ,business.industry ,Odds ratio ,Logistic Models ,New York City ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Demography - Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND AIMS: Participation in nightlife influences a range of health behaviours. Participants in various nightlife scenes have increasingly adopted prescription drug misuse into their substance use repertoires. DESIGN AND METHODS: With 404 young adults recruited via time-space sampling in New York, we examine the relationship of nightlife participation-measured by number of scenes and the number of nights out in nightlife scenes-to prescription drug misuse during the past 3 months. Outcomes included frequency of misuse, escalation to non-oral consumption, polydrug use, social problems and symptoms of dependence. RESULTS: Negative binomial regressions indicate nightlife participation is associated with increased frequency of misuse measured by number of scenes (incidence rate ratio = 1.114, P < 0.05) and number of nights out (incidence rate ratio = 1.009, P < 0.001). Logistic regression models show nightlife participation is associated with increased odds of non-oral use (adjusted odds ratio; AOR = 1.334, P < 0.01) and polydrug use (AOR = 1.776, P < 0.001) measured by number of scenes, and non-oral use (AOR = 1.021, P < 0.001) and polydrug use (AOR = 1.023, P < 0.001) as measured by number of nights out. Nightlife participation is not associated with prescription drug problems or symptoms of dependence. Frequency of participation is associated with peer norms favourable to prescription drugs (B = 0.003, P < 0.01). DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Nightlife participation has implications for prescription drug misuse. While shaping how often and in what manner young people consume prescription drugs, nightlife participation is not associated with harms experienced. Given the significance of the prescription drug trend in many world regions, these results suggest that increasing participation in nightlife shapes patterns of drug use, but in ways that do not lead to reported problems.
- Published
- 2020
44. Becoming a prescription pill smoker: Revisiting Becker
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Jeffrey T. Parsons, Mark Pawson, Brooke E. Wells, and Brian C. Kelly
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Prescription Drug Misuse ,Nightlife ,business.industry ,030508 substance abuse ,Social learning ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Set and setting ,Drug tolerance ,Pill ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Law ,Social psychology ,Deviance (sociology) - Abstract
The academic literature detailing escalations in pre-existing substance use practices is primarily understood through a biomedical lens, which situates drug escalation as a result of increases in biological markers like drug tolerance and dependence. This article seeks to frame the escalation of prescription drug misuse within a paradigm that situates drug use as a dynamic and interactional learning process shaped by set and setting. The data drawn upon for this article are derived from 41 qualitative interviews of young adults (aged 18–29 years) socially active in nightlife scenes who reported engaging in smoking prescription painkillers, sedatives, or stimulants. Results highlight how theories of drug use as a deviant behavior that is socially learned can be stretched beyond explaining patterns of initiation to also address the escalation of pre-existing drug use behaviors as users’ transition from one route of administration to another.
- Published
- 2016
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45. Psychosocial Influences of the Escalation of Deviance: The Case of Prescription Drug Sniffing
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Brian C. Kelly, Mike Vuolo, and Emily Harris
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050103 clinical psychology ,Coping (psychology) ,Prescription drug ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Prescription Drug Misuse ,education ,05 social sciences ,030508 substance abuse ,Poison control ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Psychology ,Sensation seeking ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Law ,Psychosocial ,Deviance (sociology) ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
The escalation of deviant behavior remains a central issue for criminologists, although mechanisms of intensification remain understudied. Using a sample of prescription drug misusers recruited via time-space sampling, we test five theoretically informed hypotheses on social and psychological factors – sensation seeking; coping; stigma; peer drug associations; use for pleasant times with peers – that may impact the escalation of deviance via non-normative consumption. Social factors – peer drug associations and use for pleasant time with peers – as well as stigma were associated with escalation. Sensation seeking was mediated by social factors. Social contexts are crucial for the intensification of deviant behavior.
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- 2016
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46. The Other Side of the Story: Knowledge Transfer and Advice-Giving in a Drug Subculture
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Brian C. Kelly, Jeffrey T. Parsons, and Alexandra C. Marin
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Drug ,050402 sociology ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,030508 substance abuse ,Drug user ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Psychology ,Subculture ,0504 sociology ,Perception ,Medicine ,Club drug ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Law ,Social psychology ,Social learning theory ,Knowledge transfer ,Age appropriateness ,media_common - Abstract
Widely used as a framework for understanding drug use initiation, social learning theory has lacked considerations of peer effects from the standpoint of the experienced user and applications to hard drugs. This study aims to extend social learning theory by examining the advice an experienced drug user would give a younger friend or relative expressing desire to experiment with club drugs. Forty qualitative interviews with club drugs users were analyzed. The experienced user’s own initiation, previous experiences, and risk perceptions are important in how advice is constructed. We discovered variations in advice-giving for friends and family members that may be based on considerations of age appropriateness.
- Published
- 2016
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47. Psychometric properties of the Postpartum Women Health Quotient Scale among Chinese post partum women
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Huiling Li, Jichuan Wang, Brian C. Kelly, Qian Shen, Wei Wang, Chun-Hui Li, Maureen E. Lyon, and Shen-Xian Wan
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Adult ,Postnatal Care ,China ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychometrics ,Cross-sectional study ,Health Status ,Psychological intervention ,Mothers ,Developing country ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Maternity and Midwifery ,Humans ,Medicine ,Measurement invariance ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychiatry ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Middle Aged ,Differential item functioning ,Confirmatory factor analysis ,Test (assessment) ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Scale (social sciences) ,Female ,business ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Objective to examine the psychometric properties of a newly developed Postpartum Women's Health Quotient Scale (PWHQS) for Chinese post partum women. Design a cross-sectional survey of post partum women was conducted.Categorical confirmatory factor analysis (CCFA) models were applied to examine the factorial structure of the PWHQS; test information function (TIF) was used to examine reliability of PWHQS subscales; and measurement invariance was examined by testing differential item functioning (DIF) using a multiple indicators multiple causes (MIMIC) model. Setting two large hospitals with a level 3A designation in Suzhou, Jiangsu Province, China. Participants a convenience sample of 395 post partum women was recruited from April to September 2014. Measurement the PWHQS consists of 31 items with 5 subscales: health consciousness (HC, 6 items), maternal health knowledge (MHK, 8 items), infant health knowledge (IHK, 6 items), maternal health care ability (MHCA, 5 items), and infant health care ability (IHCA, 6 items). Findings PWHQS has a valid factorial structure with five dimensions as theoretically designed. Each of its subscales has adequate reliability that is particularly high over the lower-moderate range of the factor score scale. Measurement non-invariance in PWHQS is very limited as only two of the 31 items displayed DIF related to one grouping variable (Age). Key conclusion PWHQS is a valid and reliable instrument that can be readily used as a screening tool to assess health quotient (HQ) among Chinese post partum women. PWHQS will also be useful for the development of interventions to help post partum women maintain and improve maternal and infant health. Further research to confirm the findings of the present study is desirable.
- Published
- 2016
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48. From Sexual Assault to Sexual Risk
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Tyrel J. Starks, Sarit A. Golub, Brian C. Kelly, Erika Robel, Jeffrey T. Parsons, and Brooke E. Wells
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Adult ,Male ,Sexual Behavior ,Intimate Partner Violence ,Poison control ,Models, Psychological ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,Occupational safety and health ,law.invention ,Condoms ,Health Risk Behaviors ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Condom ,Risk Factors ,law ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,Medicine ,Interpersonal Relations ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Young adult ,Applied Psychology ,Reproductive health ,Sexual identity ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,Sex Offenses ,Clinical Psychology ,Sexual Partners ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Social psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Among women and gay and bisexual men, sexual assault is associated with increased rates of sexual risk behavior and negative sexual health outcomes. Although the mechanisms of these effects are potentially myriad, the current analyses examine the role of perceived partner pressure for condomless sex in mediating the association between adult sexual assault (ASA) and recent anal or vaginal sex without a condom. In a sample of 205 young adult women and gay and bisexual men, ASA was indirectly associated with condomless anal and/or vaginal sex via perceptions of partner pressure for condomless sex, χ2(1) = 5.66, p = .02, after controlling for race, age, gender and sexual identity, and relationship status. The elucidation of this relational mechanism points to several potential intervention and prevention strategies that may reduce actual and perceived pressure for sex without a condom, including strategies designed to facilitate the prioritization of health and safety over relational goals and the improvement of partner selection and perceptions of partner pressure.
- Published
- 2016
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49. A Multilevel Test of Constrained Choices Theory
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Mike Vuolo, Joy Kadowaki, and Brian C. Kelly
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Adult ,Male ,Tobacco use ,Social Psychology ,Contextual effects ,Health outcomes ,Choice Behavior ,Odds ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Economics ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,National Longitudinal Surveys ,Constraint (mathematics) ,030505 public health ,Public economics ,Health Policy ,Smoking ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Advertising ,Test (assessment) ,Work (electrical) ,Female ,Tobacco Smoke Pollution ,Psychological Theory ,0305 other medical science - Abstract
According to Bird and Rieker’s sociology of constrained choices, decisions and priorities concerning health are shaped by the contexts—including policy, community, and work/family—in which they are formulated. While each level received attention in the original and subsequent research, we contend their constrained choices theory provides a powerful multilevel framework for modeling health outcomes. We apply this framework to tobacco clean air restrictions, combining a comprehensive database of tobacco policies with the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 from ages 19 to 31. Using multilevel panel models, we find that clean air policies lower the odds of past 30 day smoking and dependence while controlling for other policy-, city-, and individual-level constraints. We also find unique between- and within-person effects, as well as gender effects, for the constraint levied by smoking bans. We argue for the theory’s broad applicability beyond commonly cited findings regarding gender and biological influences.
- Published
- 2016
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50. State pain management clinic policies and county opioid prescribing: A fixed effects analysis
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Brian C. Kelly, Mike Vuolo, and Laura C. Frizzell
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Substance-Related Disorders ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Context (language use) ,Toxicology ,Disease cluster ,Drug Prescriptions ,Opioid prescribing ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,State (polity) ,Humans ,Pain Management ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Medical prescription ,media_common ,Pharmacology ,Government ,business.industry ,Pain management ,United States ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Policy ,Prescriptions ,Opioid ,Family medicine ,Pain Clinics ,Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The U.S. has seen an unprecedented rise in opioid-related morbidity and mortality, and states have passed numerous laws in response. Researchers have not comprehensively established the effectiveness of pain management clinic regulations to reduce opioid prescribing using national data. METHODS: We combine a policy dataset from the Prescription Drug Abuse Policy System with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention county-level opioid prescribing data, as well as with numerous government datasets for county- and state- level covariates. We predict retail opioid prescriptions dispensed per 100 people using county fixed-effects models with a state-level cluster correction. Our key predictors of interest are the presence of any state-level pain management clinic law and eight specific subcomponents of the law. RESULTS: Pain management clinic laws demonstrate consistent, negative effects on prescribing rates. Controlling for county characteristics, state spending, and the broader policy context, states with pain management clinic laws had, on average, 5.78 fewer opioid prescriptions per 100 people than states without such laws (p
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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