Limited evidence exists concerning the importance of social contexts in adolescent   substance use prevention. In addition to the important role schools play in educating   young people, they are important ecological platforms for adolescent health, development   and behaviors. In this light, school community contexts represent an important, but   largely neglected, area of research in adolescent substance use and prevention, particularly   with regard to peer influences. This study sought to add to a growing body of literature   into peer contexts by testing a model of peer substance use simultaneously on individual   and school community levels while taking account of several well established individual   level factors.
We analyzed population-based data from the 2009 Youth in Iceland school survey, with   7,084 participants (response rate of 83.5%) nested within 140 schools across Iceland.   Multilevel logistic regression models were used to analyze the data.
School-level peer smoking and drunkenness were positively related to adolescent daily   smoking and lifetime drunkenness after taking account of individual level peer smoking   and drunkenness. These relationships held true for all respondents, irrespective of   socio-economic status and other background variables, time spent with parents, academic   performance, self-assessed peer respect for smoking and alcohol use, or if they have   substance-using friends or not. On the other hand, the same relationships were not   found with regard to individual and peer cannabis use.
The school-level findings in this study represent context effects that are over and   above individual-level associations. This holds although we accounted for a large   number of individual level variables that studies generally have not included. For   the purpose of prevention, school communities should be targeted as a whole in substance   use prevention programs in addition to reaching to individuals of particular concern.
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