five

Exploring associations between early substance use and longitudinal socio-occupational functioning in young people engaged in a mental health service

收藏
Figshare2019-01-17 更新2026-04-29 收录
下载链接:
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Exploring_associations_between_early_substance_use_and_longitudinal_socio-occupational_functioning_in_young_people_engaged_in_a_mental_health_service/7602503
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
Neuropsychiatric disorders (including substance misuse) are associated with the greatest burden of functional disability in young people, and contributory factors remain poorly understood. Early-onset substance use is one candidate risk factor which may inform functional prognosis and facilitate direction of interventions aiming to curtail impairment. Accordingly, we modelled associations between early-onset use of alcohol, tobacco, cannabis and amphetamine-type stimulants (ATSs) and longitudinal socio-occupational functioning (indexed by the Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale) in an observational cohort presenting to early intervention mental health services. A clinical proforma collated demographic, clinical, and socio-occupational information for up to 60-months from presentation to services in young people aged 17–30. Of the wider cohort (n = 2398), 446 participants were selected with complete alcohol and substance use data. Latent class analysis was used to derive an ‘early-onset’ (n = 243) and ‘later-onset’ class (n = 203) based on age of first use of alcohol, tobacco, cannabis and ATSs. Maximum-likelihood multilevel analyses modelled functioning over time in care and tested associations with substance use latent class, age, gender and diagnosis. Membership in the ‘early-onset’ class (B = -1.64, p = 0.05), male gender (B = -3.27, pp
创建时间:
2019-01-17
二维码
社区交流群
二维码
科研交流群
商业服务