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How Accurate Are Adolescent Reports of Drug Use?

NCJ Number
130561
Author(s)
E J Reinisch; P L Ellickson; R M Bell
Date Published
1991
Length
35 pages
Annotation
Project ALERT is a multiwave study that tests the effect of a drug prevention program for seventh and eighth graders. Because it relies on self-reports to obtain information on whether and how often students use cigarettes, alcohol, and marijuana, assessing the accuracy of the reports is important.
Abstract
Respondents were asked a battery of questions about their experience with each substance, recency of use, frequency, level or dosage, and indicators of abusive use. Three types of longitudinal inconsistencies were examined: retractions, modifications, and new admissions. Less than five percent of the students provided incomplete or inconsistent responses within questionnaires. Most discrepancies were attributable to unintentional errors caused by carelessness or misunderstanding rather than deliberate distortions. More than 40 percent of the students committed at least one longitudinal inconsistency across the 4 waves of data collection. However, over 95 percent of these errors were minor -- classifiable as either inconsistent reporting of infrequent experimental use or as inaccurate recall of whether limited prior use had occurred within the past year. Severe inconsistencies, which involved denying frequent use, were committed by less than two percent of the students. Laboratory assessments of saliva provided independent verification that the majority of students accurately reported recent cigarette use. It was concluded that the overwhelming majority of Project ALERT students accurately reported their drug use.