Social vs. Solitary Drug Use

fruitfly

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Adolescents who use alcohol, cigarettes and marijuana while alone are more likely to have health and behavioral problems as young adults than their peers who consume the substances only in social settings, according to a RAND Corporation study issued today.

Solitary alcohol, cigarette and marijuana users are less likely to graduate from college, more likely to have substance use problems as young adults, and tend to report poorer physical health by age 23 than their peers who were social substance users, according to the study by the nonprofit research organization.

“While substance use is a problem in itself, these findings suggest that risk among solitary users is especially high,” said Joan Tucker, a RAND psychologist and lead author of the study. “Solitary use is a warning sign that youth will be less productive and have more problems as young adults — more problems, even, than others who also used substances during childhood. The challenge is to identify these at-risk children and find out what type of assistance might benefit them.”

Among the 8th graders studied, 16 percent had smoked cigarettes while alone, 17 percent had engaged in solitary drinking and 4 percent had used marijuana while alone.

Prior research has found that adolescent substance users are at risk for a wide range of problems during adolescence that persist into young adulthood, such as low academic achievement, stealing and other social problems.

The RAND Health study, published in the December edition of the journal Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, is the first to study adolescent solitary substance users and track their functioning over time.

The results come from a study of about 6,000 adolescents from California and Oregon enrolled in a program to evaluate Project ALERT, a drug use prevention program developed by RAND for middle school children. People involved in the study were asked about their substance use and a variety of other issues several times during middle school and high school, and again at age 23.

Researchers found that during adolescence, those who used alcohol, cigarettes and marijuana alone were at higher risk for a variety of troubling behaviors as compared with social-only users. Solitary users admitted to more delinquent behavior, such as stealing and acting out at school, and were less inclined to talk to their parents about personal problems.

Solitary users also were less engaged with school. This was evidenced by their lower grades, less time spent on homework and less time devoted to school activities. However, solitary users spent significantly more time going to parties and dating than other substance-using youth.

“This dispels the notion that these solitary users are lonely, socially isolated teens,” Tucker said.

Consistent with their active social life, solitary substance users typically felt that substance use has positive effects on their behavior, allowing them to relax, have more fun, and get away from their problems. In contrast, they were less likely than social-only users to think substance use is harmful — that it impairs physical and cognitive functioning, and factors into behavioral problems.

In addition, solitary users reported higher frequency and quantity of substance use compared to social-only users. On average:

Solitary users in 8th grade reported using alcohol, cigarettes or marijuana three to five days in the past month. On the days they used the substances, they smoked three to seven cigarettes, had two to three alcoholic drinks, or smoked marijuana three or more times.

Social-only users in 8th grade reported using substances less than one to two days in the past month. On the days they used the substances, they smoked one to two cigarettes, had one drink, or smoked marijuana twice.

Other authors of the study are Phyllis L. Ellickson, Rebecca L. Collins and David J. Klein, all of RAND. The study was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

The study is titled “Does Solitary Substance Use Increase Adolescents' Risk for Poor Psychosocial and Behavioral Outcomes? A 9-Year Longitudinal Study Comparing Solitary and Social Users.”
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RAND STUDY SHOWS DRUG, ALCOHOL AND CIGARETTE USE WHILE ALONE PUTS EIGHTH-GRADERS AT HIGH RISK FOR LATER PROBLEMS

RAND News Release
December 7, 2006


Link
 
I have two immediate responses.

One, Reality is socially constructed,
therefore all drug use is social.
We lack clear boundaries between the Self and Society.
We lack clear boundaries between drugs and food.
Earth is a human toilet,
everything gets flushed treated and recycled.

Two, All drug use is solitary.
You cannot use drugs as society.
You may only do drugs as an individual.
I am not real. I am only energy patterns in your mind.
Your lady friend in the bed next to you, she isn't real.
She exists as photons recreated by your brain.
These thoughts are not my own.
I didn't create this world,
I was born into it!

I think I missed their point...
 
Among the 8th graders studied, 16 percent had smoked cigarettes while alone, 17 percent had engaged in solitary drinking and 4 percent had used marijuana while alone.

Hmm thats funny. I would have thought there would be proportionaly more solitary use of Marijuana. I mean, its a great drug for solitary use, compared to say, alcohol, which is a great social drug. Put 'em both together and you got some social (or anti social) fun!!
 
Rated E said:
Hmm thats funny. I would have thought there would be proportionaly more solitary use of Marijuana. I mean, its a great drug for solitary use, compared to say, alcohol, which is a great social drug. Put 'em both together and you got some social (or anti social) fun!!

ill bet its because more teenagers have used alcohol than marijuana.
 
I agree with this report, especially smoking pot on my own has fucked me up a bit:p
 
fruitfly said:
Adolescents who use alcohol, cigarettes and marijuana while alone are more likely to have health and behavioral problems as young adults than their peers who consume the substances only in social settings, according to a RAND Corporation study issued today.

Solitary alcohol, cigarette and marijuana users are less likely to graduate from college, more likely to have substance use problems as young adults, and tend to report poorer physical health by age 23 than their peers who were social substance users, according to the study by the nonprofit research organization.

Then obviously we should make drug use more socially acceptable so that all these lonely people would not be so scared to toke up in public and make friends :)

When I lived in countries like Costa Rica, it was just so cool to be able to bring a six-pack of beer to a NEIGHBOR you don't even really know that well, and just chill out for the evening while your newly made friend breaks out the pot(well, ok ok.. he had blow too). lol Here, in Canada, if I drank a beer outside ONCE, I would be marked as a deviant :|
 
Id say people who spent most of their time alone doing anything have more problems
 
Manifespo said:
I have two immediate responses.

One, Reality is socially constructed,
therefore all drug use is social.
We lack clear boundaries between the Self and Society.
We lack clear boundaries between drugs and food.
Earth is a human toilet,
everything gets flushed treated and recycled.

Two, All drug use is solitary.
You cannot use drugs as society.
You may only do drugs as an individual.
I am not real. I am only energy patterns in your mind.
Your lady friend in the bed next to you, she isn't real.
She exists as photons recreated by your brain.
These thoughts are not my own.
I didn't create this world,
I was born into it!

I think I missed their point...

You can easily make the social construction argument about any issue. However, the fact of the matter is we cannot live life day to day in an existential observation. We all all beings of social constructions and cultural norms. Thats the nature of being human. Even if you are aware of the reality of how it works and effects us, it doesnt make it any less real. Even professors of philosophy have to pay bills and work.
 
Oh. and I did a little research. First of all, the study was supported by the NIDA. We all know how objective they are in their studies :-P. Further, I looked into the Rand Corporation. Looks like they are a government substidized research institute initially for national security that now does research into other areas. Check out this link of their sponsors and clients



http://www.rand.org/about/majorspons.html#us

Heres a few just to give you an idea:
Department of Defense

* Counterdrug Technology Development Program
* Department of the Air Force
* Department of the Army
Department of Justice

* Federal Bureau of Investigation
* National Institute of Justice
o Office of Justice Programs
Los Angeles County Probation Department


And remember, this is the same place that started "PROJECT ALERT" for middle and high schoolers, which is DARE with a different name. Same monolithic drug education. Check out their site .

http://www.projectalert.com/default.asp?bhcp=1

In any event, all im trying to say is 99% of these "studies" already have made conclusions before they even start testing. Just an outgrowth of a larger problem
 
I guess I'm pretty much an anomaly then...I've been drinking, smoking weed, doing morphine, shrooms, and everything else all by lonesome (as well as "socially") since I was 12, and I've still got the highest marks in my school...
 
i like how society tries to tell us as individuals what is wright and wrong not only when it comes to doing drugs, but also how you do them.
 
THE WOOD said:
i like how WHOEVER CONTROLS THE MEDIA tries to tell us as individuals what is wright and wrong not only when it comes to doing drugs, but also how you do them.

there ya go
 
THE WOOD said:
i like how society tries to tell us as individuals what is wright and wrong not only when it comes to doing drugs, but also how you do them.

I don't how you mean society here as in the general construction of society or mainstream society but even leaders in the counter culture (Stephen Gaskin) would recommend not using exclusively.

Look at common sense as well. Drug use with other people is also a social activity besides being a hedonistic one. Using alone is pure hedonistic and can easily lead to closing one's self from others. (Please, don't argue on this, we all know people who have done this, if not our selves)

I'd like to point out that when I do use drugs now [infrequent] I perfer to use them alone.
 
In related news: People who masturbate feverishly while alone have a slightly higher chance of becoming child molesters than people who only partake in mutual masturbation.
 
^ not being able to socialize properly due to having irregular relationships with others as a youth, perhaps? which in turn probably stemmed from the irregular relationship your parents have? which in turn was a result of their parents' fucked up'ed'ness?

The whole world is one big game of dominoes apparently.
 
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