Associations between childbirth, gang exposure and substance use among young women in Cape Town, South Africa
Felicia A. Browne, Tara Carney, Bronwyn Myers, Courtney Peasant Bonner, Wendee M. Wechsberg

TL;DR
This study explores how gang exposure and childbirth affect drug use among young women in Cape Town, finding that gang exposure increases drug use while childbirth is linked to lower marijuana use.
Contribution
The study identifies gang exposure as a significant predictor of drug use and reveals childbirth as a protective factor specifically for marijuana use.
Findings
Gang exposure is strongly associated with increased odds of marijuana, methaqualone, and methamphetamine use.
Childbirth is linked to lower odds of marijuana use but not methaqualone or methamphetamine.
Most young women reported gang exposure despite few being gang members, highlighting the pervasive influence of gangs.
Abstract
The prevalence and influence of gangs on adolescents and young adults remain a concern in Western Cape, South Africa—particularly as they have one of the largest gang presence. While less attention has been focused on young women, there is a need to elucidate the relationship between gang exposure and health behaviors, such substance use, in addition to understanding whether becoming a caregiver impacts this relationship. This study uses baseline data from 496 participants enrolled in a NIDA-funded R01 trial that recruited young women aged 16 to 19 who were out of school and reported recent alcohol or other drug use and sexual risk behavior. At enrollment, a risk behavior survey was administered, and urine drug screening was conducted. Multivariable logistic regression analyses were conducted to examine baseline associations between childbirth, a gang exposure index based on eight…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHomelessness and Social Issues · Sex work and related issues · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk
