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Dive into the research topics where Tiffany M. Jones is active.

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Featured researches published by Tiffany M. Jones.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2017

The association between regular marijuana use and adult mental health outcomes

Katarina Guttmannova; Rick Kosterman; Helene Raskin White; Jennifer A. Bailey; Jungeun Olivia Lee; Marina Epstein; Tiffany M. Jones; J. David Hawkins

OBJECTIVE The present study is a prospective examination of the relationship between regular marijuana use from adolescence through young adulthood and mental health outcomes at age 33. METHODS Data came from a gender-balanced, ethnically diverse longitudinal panel of 808 participants from Seattle, Washington. Outcomes included symptom counts for six mental health disorders. Regular marijuana use was tracked during adolescence and young adulthood. Regression analyses controlled for demographics and early environment, behaviors, and individual risk factors. RESULTS Nonusers of marijuana reported fewer symptoms of alcohol use disorder, nicotine dependence, and generalized anxiety disorder than any category of marijuana users. More persistent regular marijuana use in young adulthood was positively related to more symptoms of cannabis use disorder, alcohol use disorder, and nicotine dependence at age 33. CONCLUSIONS Findings highlight the importance of avoiding regular marijuana use, especially chronic use in young adulthood. Comprehensive prevention and intervention efforts focusing on marijuana and other substance use might be particularly important in the context of recent legalization of recreational marijuana use in Washington and other U.S. states.


Development and Psychopathology | 2016

Understanding the interplay of individual and social-developmental factors in the progression of substance use and mental health from childhood to adulthood.

Tiffany M. Jones; Karl G. Hill; Marina Epstein; Jungeun Olivia Lee; J. David Hawkins; Richard F. Catalano

This study examines the interplay between individual and social-developmental factors in the development of positive functioning, substance use problems, and mental health problems. This interplay is nested within positive and negative developmental cascades that span childhood, adolescence, the transition to adulthood, and adulthood. Data are drawn from the Seattle Social Development Project, a gender-balanced, ethnically diverse community sample of 808 participants interviewed 12 times from ages 10 to 33. Path modeling showed short- and long-term cascading effects of positive social environments, family history of depression, and substance-using social environments throughout development. Positive family social environments set a template for future partner social environment interaction and had positive influences on proximal individual functioning, both in the next developmental period and long term. Family history of depression adversely affected mental health functioning throughout adulthood. Family substance use began a cascade of substance-specific social environments across development, which was the pathway through which increasing severity of substance use problems flowed. The model also indicated that adolescent, but not adult, individual functioning influenced selection into positive social environments, and significant cross-domain effects were found in which substance-using social environments affected subsequent mental health.


Journal of Community Psychology | 2017

ASSESSMENT OF RISK AND PROTECTION IN NATIVE AMERICAN YOUTH: STEPS TOWARD CONDUCTING CULTURALLY RELEVANT, SUSTAINABLE PREVENTION IN INDIAN COUNTRY

Katarina Guttmannova; Melissa J. Wheeler; Karl G. Hill; Teresa Evans-Campbell; Lacey A. Hartigan; Tiffany M. Jones; J. David Hawkins; Richard F. Catalano

Background This study constitutes a building block in the cultural adaptation of Communities That Care (CTC), a community-based prevention system that has been found to be effective in reducing youth problem behaviors. Methods Using the data from the CTC normative survey dataset that consists of more than quarter million youth nationwide, this study examines the reliability and validity of scores derived from the Communities That Care Youth Survey (CTC-YS), one of the primary assessment tools for gathering community data on risk and protective factors related to problem behaviors including substance use. The reliability and criterion validity analyses are conducted overall for the nationwide sample of youth as well as for the student subsample of Native American youth. Results The results of this study indicate that the existing CTC-YS assessments of risk and protective factors in the domains of community, family, school, and peer groups as well as within individuals yield scores that are reliable and valid within the Native American sample of youth. Conclusions This study informs the third step in the CTC prevention planning process, which involves the assessment of risk and protective factors to be targeted in preventive interventions. The question of how the assessment of risk and protective factors among Native American youth might be further improved and a description of efforts related to the cultural adaptation of the CTC program currently underway are also addressed in the discussion.


Child Abuse & Neglect | 2018

Modeling life course pathways from adverse childhood experiences to adult mental health

Tiffany M. Jones; Paula S. Nurius; Chiho Song; Christopher M. Fleming

Although the association between adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and adult mental health is becoming well established, less is known about the complex and multiple pathways through which ACEs exert their influence. Growing evidence suggests that adversity early in life conveys not only early impacts, but also augments risk of stress-related life course cascades that continue to undermine health. The present study aims to test pathways of stress proliferation and stress embodiment processes linking ACEs to mental health impairment in adulthood. Data are from the 2011 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey, a representative sample of Washington State adults ages 18 and over (N = 14,001). Structural equation modeling allowed for testing of direct and indirect effects from ACEs though low income status, experiences of adversity in adulthood, and social support. The model demonstrated that adult low income, social support and adult adversity are in fact conduits through which ACEs exert their influence on mental health impairment in adulthood. Significant indirect pathways through these variables supported hypotheses that the effect of ACEs is carried through these variables. This is among the first models that demonstrates multiple stress-related life course pathways through which early life adversity compromises adult mental health. Discussion elaborates multiple service system opportunities for intervention in early and later life to interrupt direct and indirect pathways of ACE effects.


Public Health | 2018

Childhood neighborhood context and adult substance use problems: the role of socio-economic status at the age of 30 years

Jungeun Olivia Lee; Tiffany M. Jones; Rick Kosterman; C. Cambron; Isaac C. Rhew; Todd I. Herrenkohl; K.G. Hill

OBJECTIVES To examine whether the (a) childhood neighborhood context predicts alcohol use disorder, nicotine dependence, and cannabis use disorder symptoms at the age of 39 years; and (b) socio-economic status during young adulthood mediates these relationships. Gender differences were also examined. STUDY DESIGN The Seattle Social Development Project is a prospective longitudinal study of 808 individuals followed up from ages 10 to 39 years in Seattle, Washington, United States. The sample was gender balanced (51% were men). METHODS Alcohol, nicotine, and cannabis use disorder symptoms were assessed using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders IV-based Diagnostic Interview Schedule. Childhood neighborhood data consisted of 10 neighborhood-level variables from the 1990 national census, which were consolidated using principal component analyses. Two components with eigenvalues greater than 1 were extracted-neighborhood disadvantage and neighborhood stability. Educational attainment and employment status represented socio-economic status during young adulthood. Covariates included baseline symptoms of psychopathology, baseline substance use, gender, ethnicity, and childhood socio-economic status at the family level. Negative binomial regression was used as the primary modeling strategy. Six models for each outcome measure were estimated. The first three models examined associations between two neighborhood components and each substance use outcome measure. Next, we tested the second research question by adding unemployment and college graduate indicators at the age of 30 years as potential mediators underlying the link between the childhood neighborhood context and three substance use measures. RESULTS Study findings revealed that childhood neighborhood stability significantly reduced alcohol and cannabis use disorder symptoms nearly 3 decades later. Path analyses suggested that socio-economic status during the transition to adulthood did not influence these relationships but rather had independent effects on problematic nicotine and cannabis use. Furthermore, the effects of childhood neighborhood factors on problematic nicotine use were stronger for men. CONCLUSIONS Neighborhood characteristics during childhood may be important factors for alcohol and cannabis use disorder symptoms among adults and nicotine dependence disorder symptoms among men. Prevention efforts that address community stability and disadvantage can and should start in childhood, with a focus on intervention targets that might gain salience later in life to discourage the development and persistence of problematic substance use in adulthood.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2018

Racial Differences in Mechanisms Linking Childhood Socioeconomic Status With Growth in Adult Body Mass Index: The Role of Adolescent Risk and Educational Attainment

Amelia R. Gavin; Tiffany M. Jones; Rick Kosterman; Jungeun Olivia Lee; Christopher Cambron; Marina Epstein; Karl G. Hill; J. David Hawkins

PURPOSE The present study examined whether risk factors during adolescence, including substance use, depression, overweight status, and young adult educational attainment, mediated the association between low childhood socioeconomic status (SES) and higher body mass index (BMI) in adulthood. We also evaluated whether the hypothesized pathways differed based on racial group status. METHODS Participants from the Seattle Social Development Project were followed from ages 10 to 39years. Thepresent study included white (n = 381), African American (n = 207), and Asian American (n = 171) participants. Structural equation models tested pathways linking low childhood SES to BMI from ages 24 to 39 years. Multiple-group modeling was used to test potential racial differences. RESULTS Analyses indicated racial differences in the pathways linking low childhood SES with adult BMI. For whites, overweight status and educational attainment were significant mediators. For Asian Americans, there was an unmediated and significant pathway between low childhood SES and low adult BMI. For African Americans, there were no significant mediated or unmediated pathways. CONCLUSIONS Results stress that the pathways that link childhood SES with adult BMI may operate differently based on race. Research is particularly needed to identify mechanisms for African Americans in order to better inform obesity prevention efforts.


Public Health | 2016

Mechanisms linking high school graduation to health disparities in young adulthood: a longitudinal analysis of the role of health behaviours, psychosocial stressors, and health insurance

Jungeun Olivia Lee; Rick Kosterman; Tiffany M. Jones; Todd I. Herrenkohl; Isaac C. Rhew; Richard F. Catalano; J.D. Hawkins

OBJECTIVES This study examined three competing mechanisms in the link between educational attainment and health among young adults: (a) a health behaviour mechanism; (b) a psychosocial stressor mechanism; and (c) a health insurance mechanism. The central research question was the pervasiveness and specificity of these mechanisms in the link between low educational attainment and health outcomes during young adulthood. STUDY DESIGN A prospective longitudinal study was conducted with 808 men and women followed to age 33 years in the USA. METHODS Health outcomes included major depressive disorder, obesity, chronic health conditions, and self-rated health. The focal predictor was educational attainment at age 21. The roles of the health behaviour mechanism (heavy episodic drinking, cigarette smoking, and meeting physical activity guidelines), the psychosocial stressor mechanism (stressful life events, perceived financial stress, and lack of control at work), and having health insurance (either through their employer or union or via family members) in the link between education and varying health outcomes were assessed using path analyses. RESULTS Lack of health insurance emerged as a statistically significant explanatory factor underlying the association of education with depression and self-rated health. Health behaviours, specifically smoking and physical activity, were statistically significant intervening factors for obesity and self-rated health. CONCLUSIONS The processes linking educational attainment to health inequalities begin unfolding during young adulthood. The salience of different mechanisms is specific to a health outcome rather than pervasive across multiple health outcomes. Public health policies with a broad spectrum of components, particularly focussing on smoking, physical activity, and lack of health insurance, are recommended to promote educational equalities in multiple health outcomes among young adults.


Journal of Social Work Practice in The Addictions | 2016

The Relationship Between Interpersonal Violence Victimization and Smoking Behavior Across Time and by Gender

Allison N. Kristman-Valente; Sabrina Oesterle; Karl G. Hill; Elizabeth A. Wells; Marina Epstein; Tiffany M. Jones; J. David Hawkins

This study examined relationships between interpersonal violence victimization and smoking from childhood to adulthood. Data were from a community-based longitudinal study (N = 808) spanning ages 10 to 33. Cross-lag path analysis was used to model concurrent, directional, and reciprocal effects. Results indicate that childhood physical abuse predicted smoking and partner violence in young adulthood; partner violence and smoking were reciprocally related in the transition from young adulthood to adulthood. Gender differences in this relationship were not detected. Social work prevention efforts focused on interpersonal violence and interventions targeting smoking cessation could be critical factors for reducing both issues.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2016

Marijuana legalization and parents' attitudes, use, and parenting in Washington State

Rick Kosterman; Jennifer A. Bailey; Katarina Guttmannova; Tiffany M. Jones; Nicole Eisenberg; Karl G. Hill; J. David Hawkins


Prevention Science | 2017

The Relationship Between Marijuana and Conventional Cigarette Smoking Behavior from Early Adolescence to Adulthood

Allison N. Kristman-Valente; Karl G. Hill; Marina Epstein; Rick Kosterman; Jennifer A. Bailey; Christine M. Steeger; Tiffany M. Jones; Robert D. Abbott; Renee M. Johnson; Denise D. Walker; J. David Hawkins

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Karl G. Hill

University of Washington

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Rick Kosterman

University of Washington

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Jungeun Olivia Lee

University of Southern California

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Marina Epstein

University of Washington

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Isaac C. Rhew

University of Washington

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