Adolescent Stigma Towards Drug Addiction: Effects of Age and Drug Use Behaviour, Adlaf, Edward M, Hayley A Hamilton, Fei Wu, and Samuel Noh (2009)

Abstract

The objective of this study was to examine adolescent age and experience with drug use on stigmatizing attitudes toward drug addiction. Data were derived from the  2005 cycle of the Ontario Student Drug Use Survey. In total, 4078, 7- to 12-graders completed self-administered questionnaires that included a measure of drug abuse stigma. Results indicated that stigma scores were higher among younger than older adolescents, and the decline across age was robust, occurring among both males and females and those from rural and non-rural areas. The decline, however, was stronger among non-drug users and among those who had no close friends that use drugs. Despite the age-related decline, the level of stigma in general suggested that drug abuse stigma may continue into adulthood. Findings highlight that individual attitudes toward drug use and drug abusers are salient factors for personal drug use. Given that stigma is a barrier to treatment, but reduced stigma may encourage greater adolescent use, this study highlights the need for more in-depth studies of drug stigma.

Citation: Adlaf, Edward M, Hayley A Hamilton, Fei Wu, and Samuel Noh. ‘Adolescent stigma towards drug addiction: effects of age and drug use behaviour.’ (2009) 34 Addictive behaviors, 360.