Compounding Privilege, Resilience, and Nonmedical Prescription Stimulant Use among College Students
- PMID: 36096474
- PMCID: PMC10851314
- DOI: 10.1080/10826084.2022.2102182
Compounding Privilege, Resilience, and Nonmedical Prescription Stimulant Use among College Students
Abstract
Background: In this study, we examined why non-Hispanic White cisgender men are more likely than other subgroups to misuse prescription stimulants in college. The objective of the current study was to use a strength-based framework to examine intersectional demographic predictors. Methods: We examined gender and race/ethnicity as predictors of nonmedical prescription stimulant use (NPS) among college students. We also investigated resilience as a moderator. This report uses data from an online multisite study conducted at seven universities with 4,764 undergraduate students (70.1% women and 52.0% People of Color). Results: We found that college students who were cisgender men and non-Hispanic White used NPS significantly more than students who identified as another gender and as People of Color. There was also a buffering effect of resilience between race/ethnicity and NPS, such that resilience predicted lower NPS for People of Color, but not non-Hispanic White people 28% of the time. Conclusions: It may be that Students of Color are more resilient than non-Hispanic White students, and this resilience is protective of NPS use in college. Importantly, a compounding-privilege and/or intersectional approach to identity is crucial to fully understanding behavior (in this case NPS) in a diversity of college students; future studies should continue to use and develop such approaches.
Keywords: Nonmedical prescription stimulant use; college students; compounding privilege; resilience.
Conflict of interest statement
Disclosure Statement
None of the authors have any conflicts of interest that could inappropriately influence, or be perceived to influence, our work.
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