A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Substance use confounds associations between peer victimization and aggression in adolescence with mental disorders in adulthood: A prospective birth cohort study




AuthorsSarala Marian, Miettunen Jouko, Alakokkare Anni-Emilia, Mustonen Antti, Scott James G, Thomas Hannah J, Hurtig Tuula, Niemelä Solja

PublisherWiley

Publication year2022

JournalJournal of Adolescence

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF ADOLESCENCE

Journal acronymJ ADOLESCENCE

Volume94

Issue7

First page 996

Last page1007

Number of pages12

eISSN1095-9254

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1002/jad.12080

Web address https://doi.org/10.1002/jad.12080


Abstract

Introduction

Peer victimization and aggression in adolescence are associated with later mental health morbidity. However, studies examining this association have not controlled for adolescent substance use. We aimed to study the associations between peer victimization, peer aggression, and mental disorders in adulthood, adjusting for substance use in adolescence.

Methods

Participants were from the prospective Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986. Data were available for 6682 individuals (70.8% of the original sample). Peer victimization and peer aggression were assessed with items from the Achenbach Youth Self Report at ages 15-16 years. Outcomes were nonorganic psychosis, anxiety disorder, mood disorder, substance use disorder, and any mental disorder (a none-vs-any indicator) at age 33 years collected from nationwide health care, insurance, and pension registers. Family structure, alcohol intoxication frequency, daily smoking, illicit drug use, and baseline psychopathology using Youth Self-Report total score, and parental mental disorders were considered as confounding factors.

Results

In multivariable analyses, the association between peer victimization and psychosis (Hazard ratio [HR]: 2.9, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.2-6.9, p = .020) and mood disorder (HR: 1.7, 95% CI: 1.2-2.4, p = .012) in females remained significant after adjusting for confounders. Other associations between female and male peer victimization or aggression and the studied outcomes attenuated after adjustments.

Conclusions

Some associations between peer victimization and aggression and later mental health morbidity are explained by adolescent substance use. For females, substance use does not account for the increased risk of psychosis and mood disorder in those who experience peer victimization.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 20:10