Abstract

BackgroundNumerous studies have documented factors that are associated with substance use behaviors among college-aged individuals. However, relatively few studies have considered the heterogeneity of the college experience by field of study (i.e., college major) and how that educational context might affect students’ health behaviors differently. Drawing from theories and prior research, this study investigates whether college majors are associated with different substance use behaviors, both during college and upon graduation.MethodsThe study analyzed longitudinal data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 97 (N = 1031), specifically data on individuals who obtained a bachelor’s degree, to examine the associations between college fields of study and trajectories of three substance use behaviors: smoking, heavy alcohol use, and marijuana use.ResultsThe results indicate that social science and business majors were associated with more substance use behaviors than arts and humanities and STEM majors. However, social science majors were associated with a faster decrease in substance use behaviors over time. Importantly, the differences we found in mean levels of substance use behaviors and trajectories were not explained by demographic characteristics, family SES background, childhood health conditions, and employment experience. Further analysis that examined college major and each substance use behavior individually suggests that the associations were stronger for heavy alcohol use and marijuana use. Moreover, we found the associations were more pronounced in men than women.ConclusionsThe study finds that not all college majors show the same level of engagement in substance use behaviors over time, and that the associations also vary by (1) the specific substance use behavior examined and (2) by gender. These findings suggest it is important to consider that the different learning and educational contexts that college majors provide may also be more or less supportive of certain health behaviors, such as substance use. Practical implications are discussed.

Highlights

  • Substance use is an important public health concern in the United States

  • Students who major in STEM, health sciences, and education showed a lower degree of engagement in substance use behaviors

  • We found that trends in heavy alcohol use and marijuana use were more likely to vary by college major than trends in smoking, which did not vary across college majors

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Summary

Introduction

Substance use is an important public health concern in the United States. National surveys consistently show that substance use peaks during emerging adulthood [1]. College students may show less substance use than non-students in the same age range [2], it remains true that smoking, heavy alcohol use, and illicit drug use are not uncommon [3,4,5] among college students and are considered pressing health issues [6]. Even the most recent national survey data suggest that substance use remains a pressing health concern of the college-age population. Numerous studies have documented factors that are associated with substance use behaviors among college-aged individuals. Drawing from theories and prior research, this study investigates whether college majors are associated with different substance use behaviors, both during college and upon graduation

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