Call for papers for Special Issue on The Broader Impact of New Trends in Adolescent Substance Use
摘要截稿:
全文截稿: 2019-07-01
影响因子: 3.645
期刊难度:
CCF分类: 无
中科院JCR分区:
• 大类 : 医学 - 2区
• 小类 : 心理学:临床 - 2区
• 小类 : 药物滥用 - 1区
Overview
Addictive Behaviorsis now accepting submissions for a special issue, The Broader Impact of New Trends in Adolescent Substance Use.The focus of this special issue is on how new trends in the use of individual substances are impacting the broader context of substance use in tweens, teens, and young adults. We are particularly interested in studies that explore current trends in the use of new products (e.g., JUUL and other e-cigarette products) or of substances for which legislative changes have altered access (e.g., marijuana-based substances in the U.S.) specifically as they impact the use of other substances, health-risk behaviors, or health outcomes. Contributing studies should incorporate a developmental perspective to examine behavior in context (e.g., within schools, cultures, families), longitudinal trends (e.g., by historical time or developmental time), whole person effects (e.g., multiple related outcomes rather than single outcomes), or intersecting influences over multiple levels of analysis (e.g., biological and social influences on multiple substance use outcomes). Papers may include original investigations, methodological papers, and reviews including epidemiological, laboratory-based, clinical, behavioral, or prevention research. Specific topics of interest include:
- The impact of changing marijuana laws on other forms of substance use
- The rapid succession of new vaping products on other forms of substance use
- The impact of the opioid epidemic on other forms of adolescent substance use
- Changes in the availability, law enforcement, and attitudes of one drug impacting other forms of adolescent substance use
- Subgroups differences in these drug cross-over effects
- Mechanisms through which new drug trends impact other forms of drug use
- Prevention or treatment efforts that address drug cross-over effects
- Neurobiological models that account for drug cross-over effects during adolescents
- Developmental patterning of use trajectories across drugs (e.g., changes in gateway drugs, onset and escalation timing)