Skip Navigation Links
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
 CDC Home Search Health Topics A-Z

Preventing Chronic Disease: Public Health Research, Practice and Policy

View Current Issue
Issue Archive
Archivo de números en español








Emerging Infectious Diseases Journal
MMWR


 Home 

Volume 7: No. 2, March 2010

ORIGINAL RESEARCH
Disturbed Sleep Among Adolescents Living in 2 Communities on the Texas-Mexico Border, 2000-2003


TABLE OF CONTENTS


Translation available Este artículo en español
Print this article Print this article
E-mail this article E-mail this article:



Send feedback to editors Send feedback to editors
Download this article as a PDF Download this article as a PDF (542K)

You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view PDF files.


Navigate This Article
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
Acknowledgments
Author Information
References
Tables


Adriana Pérez, MS, PhD; Robert E. Roberts, PhD; Maureen Sanderson, PhD; Belinda Reininger, DrPH; Maria Isabel Aguirre-Flores

Suggested citation for this article: Pérez A, Roberts RE, Sanderson M, Reininger B, Aguirre-Flores MI. Disturbed sleep among adolescents living in 2 communities on the Texas-Mexico border, 2000-2003. Prev Chronic Dis 2010;7(2):A40. http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2010/
mar/09_0022.htm
. Accessed [date].

PEER REVIEWED

Abstract

Introduction
Disturbed sleep is a public health problem, but few studies describe the prevalence of sleep problems among Hispanic adolescents. We estimated the prevalence of disturbed sleep and associated factors among ninth graders living on the Texas-Mexico border.

Methods
We used probabilistic sampling to conduct 2 cross-sectional, school-based surveys: 1 during the 2000-2001 school year in the Lower Rio Grande Valley, Texas (n = 4,901), and 1 during the 2002-2003 school year in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico (n = 669). We assessed disturbed sleep during the 4 weeks before the survey.

Results
The prevalence of disturbed sleep in Matamoros was 36% and in the Lower Rio Grande Valley was 28%. Factors associated with disturbed sleep in both populations were smoking cigarettes, having ever used cocaine, having been forced to have sex, considering attempting suicide, feeling sad, and going without eating for 24 hours or more.

Conclusion
This study revealed a high prevalence of disturbed sleep in high school students living on the Texas-Mexico border. This public health issue should be further investigated in both communities.

Back to top

Introduction

Disturbed sleep affects mental health, quality of life, and activity levels in adults and children (1,2). It affects students’ learning ability, cognitive function, and behavior (3,4) and results in mood disturbance (2) and increased risk for accidents and injuries (4). Sleep problems are associated with personal and family psychosocial problems (5). Few studies, however, describe the prevalence of sleep problems among adolescents (4-9), and even fewer studies explore these problems among Hispanic adolescents (10).

People who live near the US-Mexico border are unique in their cross-acculturation. Studies have found that risk behaviors among border populations differ from those among nonborder populations (11-13). Since differences in governance, language, access to goods, and health care exist, we hypothesized that differences in the prevalence of disturbed sleep among adolescents on the Texas-Mexico border may also exist.

We estimated the prevalence of disturbed sleep among adolescents living on both sides of the Texas-Mexico border. We explored the relationship between disturbed sleep and demographic characteristics, indicators of mental health functioning, violence, obesity, and unhealthful eating. We also estimated the prevalence of sleep patterns and problems related to sleep among adolescents in the city of Matamoros, Mexico, by sex because sex differences have been observed among adolescents for lifestyle and behavioral risk factors (14,15).

Back to top

Methods

Setting, design, and participants

The Lower Rio Grande Valley (LRGV) comprises 4 counties in Texas on the Mexico border: Cameron, Hidalgo, Starr, and Willacy. LRGV had 978,369 residents in 2000; residents are predominantly Hispanic (88%), of Mexican American origin (86% of Hispanics), and low income (35% below the poverty threshold in 1999) (16). Brownsville is the county seat of Cameron County; its sister city in Mexico is Matamoros in the state of Tamaulipas. Matamoros is less than 3 miles south of Brownsville and in 2000 had a population of 412,544 (17).

Data for this study came from 2 school-based surveys. The first survey (18) was conducted in English during the 2000-2001 school year in LRGV. This survey was then translated into Spanish, back-translated into English, and cross-culturally adapted for Mexican nationals. This second survey was conducted during the 2002-2003 school year in Matamoros (12). A full description of both surveys, study designs, participants, and samples has been reported previously (12,18). Briefly, ninth-grade students from both sides of the Texas-Mexico border were surveyed to determine risk behaviors that contribute to illness and death among adolescents. Both surveys were self-administered during regularly scheduled classes. Passive parental consent was obtained in LRGV and active parental consent was obtained in Matamoros; the children provided consent in both surveys. Survey protocols were reviewed and approved by the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston’s Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects and by the Secretariat of Education of the state of Tamaulipas.

All ninth-grade students from randomly selected schools in LRGV were invited to participate. The LRGV sample included 4,901 students, all of Hispanic origin, from 13 of 18 high schools; this sample represented 23% of ninth-grade students in LRGV during the 2000-2001 school year. In Matamoros, we randomly selected 8 of 28 high schools. All ninth-grade students from selected schools were invited to participate in the survey. The Matamoros sample included 669 students and represented 12% of ninth-grade students in Matamoros during the 2002-2003 school year. The response rates for the surveys were 67% from the LRGV and 58% from Matamoros. We did not collect data on students who did not participate.

Surveys

The surveys asked 7 questions about sleep patterns and problems related to sleep. These questions were used previously to operationalize Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (19), symptom criteria for sleep disturbance (5,6). Two questions were related to amount of sleep reported in the past 4 weeks on weekday and weekend nights. Restorative sleep was assessed with the question, “During the past 4 weeks, how often have you felt really rested when waking up in the morning?” Overall quality of sleep was assessed with the question, “During the past 4 weeks, how would you rate the quality of your sleep overall?”

Three questions assessed problems related to sleep disturbance: “During the past 4 weeks, how often would you say you have had any of these problems related to your sleep: 1) trouble falling asleep (difficulty initiating sleep), 2) waking up in the middle of the night and finding it hard to get back to sleep (difficulty maintaining sleep), and 3) waking up very early and not being able to get back to sleep (early morning awakening)?” An adolescent who experienced at least 1 of these problems often or almost every day in the past 4 weeks was defined as having disturbed sleep.

We analyzed demographic covariates as potential risk factors for disturbed sleep among adolescents; these covariates included sex, age, ethnic origin, employment status, and perceived family standard of living (used as a proxy for socioeconomic status). Ethnic origin was assessed in the LRGV cohort with the question, “If you are Hispanic or Latino in origin, are you Mexican American (born in United States), Mexican American (born in Mexico), Mexican national, or other Hispanic or Latino (Cuban, Central American, Puerto Rican, etc)?” Because of regulations, we could not ask about country of origin in Matamoros, and all students were considered to be Mexican nationals. Perceived family standard of living was collapsed into 3 categories: very well off, living comfortably or just getting along, and nearly poor or poor.

As an indicator of mental health, the survey also included questions on substance use. We asked about the frequency of smoking cigarettes, drinking alcohol, and using marijuana in the past 30 days. We also asked about lifetime use of cocaine and steroids. To measure mood disturbance, we asked, “During the past 12 months, did you ever feel so sad or hopeless almost every day for 2 weeks or more in a row that you stopped doing some usual activities?” Attempting suicide was measured with the question, “During the past 12 months, did you ever seriously consider attempting suicide?”

LRGV students self-reported their height and weight, and Matamoros students had their height and weight measured to the nearest 1 mm and 0.1 kg, respectively, while the students were wearing light clothing and no shoes. Body mass index (BMI) was calculated by dividing weight in kilograms by the square of the height in meters. We used BMI-for-age growth charts (http://www.cdc.gov/growthcharts/) to classify students as underweight or normal weight (<85th percentile), overweight (≥85th percentile to <95th percentile), or obese (≥95th percentile).

We assessed violence by asking whether students had been in a physical fight in the past 12 months. We also asked whether they had ever been forced to have sex. We measured 1 unhealthy dietary behavior by asking, “During the past 30 days, did you go without eating for 24 hours or more to lose weight or to keep from gaining weight?”

Statistical analysis

Both surveys used a multistage stratified cluster design combined with probability proportional to school size sampling. Sampling weights were used in the analysis to account for the multistage stratified sampling design. In Matamoros, nonresponse adjustment and ratio adjustment for population-fixed totals were used from school records to ensure that the sex composition of the sample was the same as that of the total school enrollment. Adjustment was not done in the LRGV survey because of limitations in the sampling frame. Weighted percentages, means, standard errors, and test statistics were calculated with SUDAAN version 9.0 (RTI International, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina). Multiple logistic regression was used to estimate adjusted odds ratios with their corresponding 95% confidence intervals. Differences were considered significant at P < .05.

Back to top

Results

The median age of participants was 15 years in LRGV and 14 years in Matamoros. In LRGV, boys were more likely than girls to be above the 85th percentile of BMI for age. In Matamoros, the difference in BMI for age between boys and girls was not significant. Perceived family standard of living differed significantly between Matamoros and LRGV, and the difference was also significant between boys and girls in both areas.

In Matamoros boys reported sleeping fewer hours and having fewer sleep problems than did girls (Table 1). Students from Matamoros reported more hours of sleep on weeknights (weeknight median, 7.3; 95% confidence interval [CI], 6.9-7.7; weekend median, 7.7; 95% CI, 7.5-7.9) than did students from LRGV (weeknight median, 6.7; 95% CI, 6.6-6.8; weekend median, 7.0; 95% CI, 8.6-7.1) (P = .04).

The prevalence of disturbed sleep was 36% in Matamoros and 28% in LRGV (P = .01). The prevalence of disturbed sleep differed by sex in LRGV but not in Matamoros (Table 2). The prevalence of disturbed sleep did not differ by age in either area.

After adjusting for demographic characteristics, adolescents in LRGV who had a job were less likely to have disturbed sleep (Table 3). Except for BMI category, all the other factors were positively associated with disturbed sleep among adolescents in LRGV. Findings were similar in Matamoros, although the associations with having a job, drinking alcohol, using marijuana, using steroids, being overweight, and having been in a fight did not reach significance.

Back to top

Discussion

We found a lower prevalence of disturbed sleep in LRGV adolescents (28%) than in Matamoros adolescents (36%). These prevalences were higher than reported in adolescents in 4 European countries (26%) (7) but lower than in the north of France (40%) (8). Approximately 15% of the adolescents in Matamoros reported that they had difficulty falling asleep often or almost every day in the past month, which was similar to findings in LRGV adolescents (16%) (18) and New Zealand students (15%) (20). The prevalence of early awakening in Matamoros students was higher (25%) than in other studies (7,9,18).

Many of the factors we found to be associated with disturbed sleep have been identified in adult populations (21), but few data are available on adolescents (6,18). Adolescents in LRGV who had a job reported that they were less likely to have disturbed sleep, and to our knowledge no other studies have reported this association. Unfortunately, we do not have qualitative data to explain the reasons for this finding. Our finding of cocaine use as a risk factor for disturbed sleep among adolescents in both Matamoros and LRGV is consistent with other studies on insomnia (7).

The association we found between obesity and disturbed sleep in Matamoros is consistent with previous reports that inadequate sleep time may contribute to obesity in adolescents (22,23). An association between sleep disorders and eating disorders has been reported (24). We observed this association in both Matamoros and LRGV, where students who reported unhealthy weight loss were twice as likely to have disturbed sleep.

Although a previous study found an association between sleep problems and stress (9), to our knowledge, this is the first study to report an association between forced sexual intercourse and disturbed sleep in adolescents. Services and intervention programs are needed for victimized children. In addition to their other benefits, such intervention programs have the potential to lessen the negative health effects of disturbed sleep.

Limitations

Our study has several limitations. First, our measure of disturbed sleep was not inclusive. We investigated hours of sleep, restorative sleep, and other symptoms of disturbed sleep, but we did not examine parasomnias or formal diagnostic criteria for insomnia (19). Second, we relied on self-reported data, although these are widely used in community surveys and correlate well with data obtained by objective measures of disturbed sleep (19,25). A third limitation was that our sleep items asked whether participants experienced symptoms of disturbed sleep almost every day for the past 4 weeks. Therefore, we could not differentiate between students with chronic versus acute sleep problems. A fourth limitation was conducting the survey in Matamoros 2 years after the survey was conducted in LRGV; however, results should be comparable because of the lack of interventions during those 2 years. A fifth limitation of our surveys is that we did not measure any chronic diseases, which may influence the sleep process (6).

Conclusions

The challenge of overcoming the high prevalence of disturbed sleep among adolescents on the Texas-Mexico border region is immense. Teaching adolescents about healthy sleep habits may reduce this prevalence. Nevertheless, studies are needed that identify additional risk factors and potential strategies to reduce disturbed sleep among adolescents.

Back to top

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIH CMHD P20MD000170-019001). We thank the principals, coordinators, teachers, and other staff in the schools in Matamoros and LRGV for their support of this study. We also thank the students from the associate degree program in nursing at the University of Texas at Brownsville, the staff from Healthy Communities of Brownsville, Inc, the staff from the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston School of Public Health Brownsville Regional Campus, and volunteers and staff members from the Secretaría de Educación de Tamaulipas. We also thank the reviewers for their helpful comments that improved an earlier version of this manuscript.

Back to top

Author Information

Corresponding Author: Adriana Pérez, MS, PhD, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, 313 E 12 St, Ste 220H, Austin, TX 78701. Telephone: 512-482-6183. E-mail: adriana.perez@uth.tmc.edu. When this article was written, Dr Pérez was affiliated with the University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky.

Author Affiliations: Robert E. Roberts, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas; Maureen Sanderson, Meharry Medical College, Nashville, Tennessee; Belinda Reininger, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston and Hispanic Health Research Center at the Lower Rio Grande Valley, Brownsville, Texas; Maria Isabel Aguirre-Flores, Secretaría de Educación de Tamaulipas, Ciudad Victoria. All work was performed at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Brownsville, Texas.

Back to top

References

  1. Lee KA, Ward TM. Critical components of a sleep assessment for clinical practice settings. Issues Ment Health Nurs 2005;26(7):739-50.
  2. Oginska H, Pokorski J. Fatigue and mood correlates of sleep length in three age-social groups: school children, students, and employees. Chronobiol Int 2006;23(6):1317-28.
  3. Dahl RE, Lewin DS. Pathways to adolescent health sleep regulation and behavior. J Adolesc Health 2002;31(6 Suppl):175-84.
  4. National Sleep Foundation. Adolescent sleep needs and patterns. Research report and resource guide. http://www.sleepfoundation.org/article/hot-topics/adolescent-sleep-needs-and-patterns. Accessed November 13, 2009.
  5. Roberts RE, Roberts CR, Chen IG. Impact of insomnia on future functioning of adolescents. J Psychosom Res 2002;53(1):561-9.
  6. Roberts RE, Roberts CR, Chen IG. Functioning of adolescents with symptoms of disturbed sleep. J Youth Adolesc 2001;30(1):1-18.
  7. Ohayon MM, Roberts RE, Zulley J, Smirne S, Priest RG. Prevalence and patterns of problematic sleep among older adolescents. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2000;39(12):1549-56.
  8. Bailly D, Bailly-Lambin I, Querleu D, Beuscart R, Collinet C. Sleep in adolescents and its disorders. A survey in schools [article in French]. Encephale 2004;30(4):352-9.
  9. Liu X, Uchiyama M, Okawa M, Kurita H. Prevalence and correlates of self-reported sleep problems among Chinese adolescents. Sleep 2000;23(1):27-34.
  10. Valencia-Flores M, Castano VA, Campos RM, Rosenthal L, Resendiz M, Vergara P, et al. The siesta culture concept is not supported by the sleep habits of urban Mexican students. J Sleep Res 1998;7(1):21-9.
  11. Perez A, Brown HS III, Restrepo BI. Association between tuberculosis and diabetes in the Mexican border and non-border regions of Texas. Am J Trop Med Hyg 2006;74(4):604-11.
  12. Perez A, Reininger BM, Aguirre-Flores MI, Sanderson M, Roberts RE. Physical activity and overweight among adolescents on the Texas-Mexico border. Rev Panam Salud Publica 2006;19(4):244-52.
  13. Russell AY, Williams MS, Farr PA, Schwab AJ, Plattsmier S. The mental health status of young Hispanic women residing along the border: a twin cities comparison. Women Health 1999;28(3):15-32.
  14. Fortuna LR, Perez DJ, Canino G, Sribney W, Alegria M. Prevalence and correlates of lifetime suicidal ideation and suicide attempts among Latino subgroups in the United States. J Clin Psychiatry 2007;68(4):572-81.
  15. Borowsky IW, Ireland M, Resnick MD. Adolescent suicide attempts: risks and protectors. Pediatrics 2001;107(3):485-93.
  16. US Census Bureau. Census 2000 summary file 4 (SF 4) — sample data. http://www.census.gov/support/SF4Data.html. Accessed April 7, 2005.
  17. XII Censo general de población y vivienda 2000. Instituto Nacional de Estadística, Geografía, e Informática. http://www.inegi.org.mx/inegi/default.aspx?c=10211&s=est. Accessed November 11, 2004.
  18. Roberts RE, Lee ES, Hernandez M, Solari AC. Symptoms of insomnia among adolescents in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas. Sleep 2004;27(4):751-60.
  19. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, fourth edition, text revision. Washington (DC): American Psychiatric Publishing; 2000.
  20. Morrison DN, McGee R, Stanton WR. Sleep problems in adolescence. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 1992;31(1):94-9.
  21. Shin C, Kim J, Yi H, Lee H, Lee J, Shin K. Relationship between trait-anger and sleep disturbances in middle-aged men and women. J Psychosom Res 2005;58(2):183-9.
  22. Hart CN, Jelalian E. Shortened sleep duration is associated with pediatric overweight. Behav Sleep Med 2008;6(4):251-67.
  23. Noland H, Price JH, Dake J, Telljohann SK. Adolescents’ sleep behaviors and perceptions of sleep. J Sch Health 2009;79(5):224-30.
  24. Winkelman JW, Herzog DB, Fava M. The prevalence of sleep-related eating disorder in psychiatric and non-psychiatric populations. Psychol Med 1999;29(6):1461-6.
  25. Sadeh A, McGuire JP, Sachs H, Seifer R, Tremblay A, Civita R, et al. Sleep and psychological characteristics of children on a psychiatric inpatient unit. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 1995;34(6):813-9.

Back to top

 



 

Tables

Return to your place in the textTable 1. Disturbed Sleep Among 669 Adolescents in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico, 2003
Variable Boys, %a Girls, %a Total, %a Pearson χ2 b P Value
Hours slept weekday nights
≤6 22 15 18 5.11 .02
7 25 24 24
8 27 28 28
≥9 26 33 30
Hours slept weekend nights
≤6 25 19 22 0.29 .59
7 12 17 15
8 18 20 19
≥9 45 44 45
Frequency of restorative sleep
Rarely or never 4 6 5 0.83 .36
Sometimes 54 55 55
Often 21 22 22
Almost every day 20 17 18
Overall quality of sleep
Very good 15 12 14 2.64 .11
Fairly good 44 40 42
Fairly bad 38 43 41
Very bad 3 4 4
Difficulty initiating sleep
Rarely or never 50 43 46 0.14 .70
Sometimes 34 43 39
Often 12 10 11
Almost every day 4 3 4
Difficulty maintaining sleep
Rarely or never 56 39 46 11.43 <.001
Sometimes 36 50 44
Often 7 7 7
Almost every day 1 5 3
Early morning awakening
Rarely or never 46 37 41 4.65 .03
Sometimes 33 35 34
Often 11 14 13
Almost every day 9 14 12

a Percentages may not total 100 because of rounding.
b All df = 1.

Return to your place in the textTable 2. Prevalence of Disturbed Sleepa by Selected Risk Factors Among Adolescents in LRGV (n = 4,901) and Matamoros (n = 669)
Risk Factor LRGV Matamoros
% With Disturbed Sleep % Without Disturbed Sleep P Valueb % With Disturbed Sleep % Without Disturbed Sleep P Valueb
Total 28 72 NA 36 64 NA
Sex
Male 25 75 <.001 36 64 .71
Female 32 68 35 65
Age, y
≤14 28 72 .87 34 66 .67
15 28 72 37 63
≥16 28 72 33 67
Perceived family standard of living
Very well off 21 79 <.001 37 63 .91
Living comfortably or just getting along 29 71 35 65
Nearly poor or poor 51 49 36 64
Ethnic identity
Mexican national 24 76 <.001 36 64 NA
Mexican American (born in United States) 30 70 NA NA
Mexican American (born in Mexico) 21 79 NA NA
Other Hispanic or Latino 40 60 NA NA
Have a job currently
Yes 27 73 .02 38 62 .55
No 32 68 34 66
Hours slept weekday nights
≤6 40 60 <.001 50 50 .006
7 24 76 38 62
8 20 80 28 72
≥9 23 77 33 67
Hours slept weekend nights
≤6 32 68 <.001 49 51 <.001
7 30 70 38 62
8 25 75 29 71
≥9 25 75 30 70
During the past 4 weeks, how often have you felt rested when waking up in the morning?
Rarely or never 38 62 <.001 63 37 <.001
Sometimes 22 78 40 60
Often 25 75 35 65
Almost every day 29 71 15 85
During the past 4 weeks, how would you rate the quality of your sleep overall?
Very good 12 88 <.001 14 86 <.001
Fairly good 20 80 30 70
Fairly bad 47 53 45 55
Very bad 66 34 71 29
Smoked cigarette in past 30 days
Yes 38 62 <.001 45 55 .05
No 24 76 33 67
At least 1 drink of alcohol in past 30 days
0 days 23 77 <.001 32 68 .07
1-5 days 30 70 42 58
≥6 days 42 58 61 39
Marijuana use in past 30 days
0 times 25 75 <.001 36 64 .62
1-2 times 34 66 26 74
≥3 times 42 58 55 45
Ever use cocaine
Yes 42 58 <.001 74 26 .01
No 25 75 35 65
Ever use steroids
Yes 43 57 <.001 52 48 <.001
No 27 73 35 65
Felt sad or hopeless every day for ≥2 weeks in a row
Yes 45 55 <.001 48 52 <.001
No 22 78 31 69
Considered attempting suicide
Yes 48 52 <.001 51 49 .05
No 24 76 33 67
Body mass index categoryc
Underweight/normal 28 72 .83 34 66 .001
Overweight 29 71 35 65
Obese 28 72 41 58
In a physical fight in past 12 months
Yes 33 67 <.001 39 61 .21
No 26 74 33 67
Ever forced to have sex
Yes 45 55 <.001 70 30 .01
No 27 73 34 66
Gone ≥24 hours without eating in past 30 days
Yes 43 57 <.001 46 54 .04
No 25 75 34 66

Abbreviations: LRGV, Lower Rio Grande Valley; NA, not applicable.
a Defined as difficulty initiating sleep, difficulty maintaining sleep, or early morning awakening often or almost every day in the past 4 weeks.
b Pearson χ2.
c Underweight or normal weight, <85th percentile; overweight, ≥85th percentile to <95th percentile; obese, ≥95th percentile.

Return to your place in the textTable 3. Odds of Disturbed Sleep by Selected Risk Factors Among Adolescents in LRGV (n = 4,901) and Matamoros (n = 669)
Risk factor Odds Ratio (95% Confidence Interval)a
LRGV Matamoros Combined
Have a job
No 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
Yes 0.79 (0.62-0.99) 1.18 (0.83-1.67) 0.88 (0.70-1.12)
Smoked cigarette in past 30 days
No 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
Yes 1.93 (1.60-2.33) 1.64 (1.02-2.65) 1.91 (1.59-2.29)
Drank alcohol in past 30 days
0 days 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
1-5 days 1.36 (1.15-1.61) 1.49 (0.57-3.94) 1.43 (1.08-1.89)
≥6 days 2.46 (1.73-3.50) 2.86 (0.63-12.90) 2.58 (1.86-3.57)
Used marijuana in past 30 days
0 times 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
1-2 times 1.55 (1.24-1.93) 0.64 (0.21-1.96) 1.52 (1.20-1.93)
≥3 times 2.10 (1.43-3.07) 2.21 (0.44-11.10) 2.14 (1.49-3.06)
Ever used cocaine
No 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
Yes 1.98 (1.42-2.78) 5.50 (2.00-15.13) 2.12 (1.56-2.89)
Ever used steroids
No 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
Yes 1.96 (1.40-2.73) 2.24 (0.74-6.79) 1.99 (1.41-2.82)
Felt sad or hopeless every day for ≥2 weeks in a row
No 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
Yes 2.76 (2.44-3.11) 2.16 (1.67-2.78) 2.63 (2.35-2.95)
Considered attempting suicide in past 12 months
No 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
Yes 2.49 (2.08-2.98) 2.35 (1.24-4.45) 2.51 (2.00-3.16)
Body mass index categoryb
Underweight/normal 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
Overweight 0.99 (0.84-1.16) 1.07 (0.77-1.49) 1.03 (0.89-1.21)
Obese 0.99 (0.85-1.17) 1.33 (1.04-1.69) 1.10 (0.97-1.25)
In a physical fight in past 12 months
No 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
Yes 1.47 (1.20-1.80) 1.29 (0.91-1.84) 1.43 (1.18-1.73)
Ever forced to have sex
No 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
Yes 2.07 (1.42-3.00) 4.44 (1.31-15.00) 2.25 (1.55-3.27)
Gone ≥24 hours without eating in past 30 days
No 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference] 1 [Reference]
Yes 2.01 (1.42-2.85) 1.76 (1.23-2.51) 2.01 (1.52-2.67)

Abbreviation: LRGV, Lower Rio Grande Valley.
a All analyses are adjusted for sex, age, and perceived family standard of living. LRGV data are additionally adjusted for ethnic origin. Combined data are additionally adjusted for location (LRGV used as reference).
b Underweight or normal, <85th percentile; overweight, ≥85th percentile to <95th percentile; obese, ≥95th percentile.

Back to top

 




 



The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


 Home 

Privacy Policy | Accessibility

CDC Home | Search | Health Topics A-Z

This page last reviewed March 30, 2012

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
 HHS logoUnited States Department of
Health and Human Services