Understanding the Role of Neighborhoods on Urban Youth's Substance Use and Mental Health: A Community-Based Substance Abuse Prevention Project
Project Number5DP5OD029636-06
Former Number1DP5OD029636-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderOPARA, IJEOMA
Awardee OrganizationYALE UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
PROJECT SUMMARY
Urban youth in the United States are more likely to be exposed to licit and illicit substances, experience higher levels of
anxiety and depressive symptoms, and live in under-resourced areas. Such a disparity leaves urban youth at risk of poorer
health outcomes than their counterparts. Since youth substance use is on the rise, it is imperative for innovative methods
to be utilized in order to tackle this complex issue. The association between substance use, neighborhood characteristics,
and mental health outcomes in youth is emerging in the literature yet disparities continue to impact youth in urban
communities. Paterson, New Jersey is a northeastern, urban community which has one the highest rates of substance
abuse in the nation. Youth living in Paterson are overly exposed to drug use in their neighborhoods and have extreme
access to substances, leaving them more at risk to initiate use at earlier ages and more likely to become dependent into
adulthood. My research in this community has shown that neighborhood and community level characteristics, in addition
to depressive and anxiety symptoms among youth, can be key facilitators to early substance use. Previous research has
overwhelmingly placed the blame on individuals, particularly youth, as opposed to acknowledging the systemic structures
and the environmental context in which youth are nested. Although substance use prevention interventions exist, youth
who are the most vulnerable and often the hardest to reach, are not engaged in prevention interventions or connected to
resources. In order to reach this at-risk population, I propose to use an innovative method, venue-based sampling, to
recruit at-risk youth. The research addresses these specific aims:
Aim 1: To examine the association between neighborhood characteristics, substance use, and mental health
symptoms among Paterson youth using quantitative and qualitative methods.
Aim 2: Use findings from Aim 1 to inform the adaptation of a community-based and evidence-based substance
use prevention intervention for Paterson youth.
Aim 3: Pilot the intervention on a sample of Paterson youth.
I hypothesize that there will be significant differences in risk and protective factors by race, gender, age, and
socioeconomic status among Paterson youth. This project will use multiple sources of data to inform findings and use
preliminary data to prepare a more robust R01 clinical trial application to be implemented in Paterson and other urban
cities that will account for unique differences in urban youth.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
This study will determine whether there is a significant association between neighborhood characteristics, substance
abuse, and mental health symptoms among urban youth. Using innovative methods in recruitment such as venue-based
sampling, this study will obtain a representative sample of youth to include those who are most at-risk such as street-
involved and truant youth. Results from this study will advance the field of substance abuse prevention by including
hidden populations of youth to inform the adaptation of a substance abuse prevention intervention.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AIDS preventionAccountingAddressAdministratorAdolescentAdultAfrican AmericanAgeAreaAwardBehavioral SciencesBlack raceCharacteristicsCitiesClinical TrialsCollaborationsCommunitiesCommunity based preventionComplexDataDedicationsDentistryDevelopmentDiscipline of NursingDisparityDrug abuseDrug usageEmpirical ResearchEnvironmentEpidemicEquationEthnic PopulationEvaluationExposure toFacultyFocus GroupsFoundationsGenderGrantHIVHealth SciencesHealth TechnologyHepatitis C virusHispanicIllicit DrugsIndividualInstitutionInterventionLiteratureManuscriptsMedicineMental HealthMentorsMethodologyMethodsModelingNational Institute of Drug AbuseNeeds AssessmentNeighborhoodsNew JerseyNew YorkOutcomeParticipantPharmaceutical PreparationsPhasePopulationPopulations at RiskPrevention ResearchProcessPublic HealthPublishingQualifyingQualitative MethodsRaceRegression AnalysisResearchResearch PersonnelResearch SupportResource-limited settingResourcesRiskRisk FactorsRoleSamplingSchoolsSocial WelfareSocioeconomic StatusStructureSubstance abuse problemSymptomsTechnologyTrainingTruancyUnited StatesUniversitiesUrban CommunityVulnerable PopulationsWritingYouthadolescent substance useagedanxiety symptomscareercommunity collaborationcommunity organizationscommunity partnersdepressive symptomsdesigndoctoral studentevidence baseexperiencefeasibility trialgender differencehealth managementimproved outcomeinnovationinterdisciplinary approachinterestmultiple data sourcespoor health outcomepre-doctoralpreventive interventionprogramsprotective factorsracial populationrecruitresearch studyrisk perceptionschool districtsubstance abuse preventionsubstance usesubstance use preventionsuburban communitiestrend
National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research
$1
2024
NIH Office of the Director
$418,749
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5DP5OD029636-06
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
No Publications available for 5DP5OD029636-06
Patents
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Outcomes
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No Outcomes available for 5DP5OD029636-06
Clinical Studies
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History
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