PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

High childhood IQ linked to subsequent illicit drug use

2011-11-15
(Press-News.org) A high childhood IQ may be linked to subsequent illegal drug use, particularly among women, suggests research published online in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.

The authors base their findings on data from just under 8,000 people in the 1970 British Cohort Study, a large ongoing population based study, which looks at lifetime drug use, socioeconomic factors, and educational attainment.

The IQ scores of the participants were measured at the ages of 5 and 10 years, using a validated scale, and information was gathered on self reported levels of psychological distress and drug use at the age of 16, and again at the age of 30 (drug use only) .

Drug use included cannabis; cocaine; uppers (speed and wiz); downers (blues, tanks, barbiturates); LSD (acid); and heroin.

By the age of 30, around one in three men (35.4%) and one in six women (15.9%) had used cannabis, while 8.6% of men and 3.6% of women had used cocaine, in the previous 12 months.

A similar pattern of use was found for the other drugs, with overall drug use twice as common among men as among women.

When intelligence was factored in, the analysis showed that men with high IQ scores at the age of 5 were around 50% more likely to have used amphetamines, ecstasy, and several illicit drugs than those with low scores, 25 years later.

The link was even stronger among women, who were more than twice as likely to have used cannabis and cocaine as those with low IQ scores.

The same associations emerged between a high IQ score at the age of 10 and subsequent use of cannabis, ecstasy, amphetamines, multiple drug use and cocaine, although this last association was only evident at the age of 30.

The findings held true, irrespective of anxiety/depression during adolescence, parental social class, and lifetime household income.

"Although most studies have suggested that higher child or adolescent IQ prompts the adoption of a healthy lifestyle as an adult, other studies have linked higher childhood IQ scores to excess alcohol intake and alcohol dependency in adulthood," write the authors.

Although it is not yet clear exactly why there should be a link between high IQ and illicit drug use, the authors point to previous research, showing that highly intelligent people are open to experiences and keen on novelty and stimulation.

Other research has also shown that brainy children are often easily bored and suffer at the hands of their peers for being different, "either of which could conceivably increase vulnerability to using drugs as an avoidant coping strategy," explain the authors.

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Contraceptive pill associated with increased prostate cancer risk worldwide

2011-11-15
Use of the contraceptive pill is associated with an increased risk of prostate cancer around the globe, finds research published in BMJ Open. Prostate cancer is the most common male cancer in the developed world and the use of the contraceptive pill has soared over the past 40 years, say the authors. The research team used data from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) and the United Nations World Contraceptive Use report to pinpoint rates of prostate cancer and associated deaths and the proportion of women using common methods of contraception for ...

Preferences shaped by evolution draw voters to candidates with lower-pitched voices

2011-11-15
HAMILTON -- Voters prefer to choose candidates with lower-pitched voices, according to new findings by researchers at McMaster University. A team from the Department of Psychology, Neuroscience and Behavior found that study subjects were more inclined to vote for men with lower-pitched voices, suggesting that perceptions developed long ago may be still be influencing the way we choose leaders. "We're looking at men's low voice-pitch as a cue to dominance, which is related to leadership," says graduate student Cara Tigue, lead author of the paper, published on-line ...

Attention Talk Radio Presents "ADHD: Organizing and Putting ADHD Treatments into a Context We Can All Understand," with Dr. Russell Ramsay on November 23

2011-11-15
Attention Talk Radio presents host and attention coach Jeff Copper with Dr. Russell Ramsay who discuss various forms of treatment for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and then organize and put them into a context everyone can understand. Dr. Russell Ramsay is currently co-director of the University of Pennsylvania Adult ADHD Treatment and Research Program and an associate professor of clinical psychology in psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. He received his Ph.D. from Pacific Graduate School of Psychology (now known as Palo ...

Nice guys can finish first

2011-11-15
It turns out nice guys can finish first, and David Rand has the evidence to prove it. Rand, a post-doctoral fellow in Harvard's Department of Psychology and a Lecturer in Human Evolutionary Biology, is the lead author of a new paper, which found that dynamic, complex social networks encourage their members to be friendlier and more cooperative, with the possible payoff coming in an expanded social sphere, while selfish behavior can lead to an individual being shunned from the group and left – literally – on their own. As described this week in the Proceedings of ...

Talking therapy over the phone improves symptoms of chronic widespread pain

2011-11-15
Patients who received a short course of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) over the telephone from trained therapists reported that they felt "better" or "very much better" at the end of a six-month treatment period, and also three months after it ended. The Arthritis Research UK-funded trial led by the University of Aberdeen working with the University of Manchester was the first-ever trial of telephone-delivered CBT for people with chronic widespread pain. Cognitive behavioural therapy is a psychological method of helping people manage their pain by identifying and ...

Debbi Dachinger Expert On Goal Achievement Releases New Boo: "Dare To Dream: This Life Counts!" 5-Star Reviews For This Guide With Methods To Bypass Obstacles And Make Dreams Into A Reality.

2011-11-15
Debbi Dachinger is an award-winning, syndicated radio host on "Dare to Dream." She knows first-hand what it is like to discover life's passions and experience them. In the book "Dare to Dream: This Life Counts," she discusses ways to handle goal obstacles such as trust, time management, finances, playing small, clarity, support, failure, fear, and doubts, as well as other miscellaneous dream busters. Additionally, the book and guide contains inspiring success stories, exercises, new ideas, inspiring motivation, examples, patterns of extremely successful ...

Canadian researchers find potential new leukemia treatment with old antibiotic drug

2011-11-15
(Toronto – Nov. 14, 2011) – Clinician-scientists in the Princess Margaret Cancer Program have found a promising approach to treating leukemia, using an old drug in a new way. The proof-of-concept research published today in Cancer Cell (10.1016/j.ccr.2011.10.015) describes how the Canadian team discovered that the antibiotic tigecycline targets and destroys leukemia stem cells by cutting off the cell's energy production. "If you think of all the cells in the body as a power grid, we've discovered that tigecycline can cause a power outage in leukemia stem cells, while ...

Post heart attack recovery may not be aided by stem cell injections, but trial demonstrates promise

2011-11-15
CLEVELAND/ORLANDO – University Hospitals Case Medical Center researchers could still be close to giving heart attack patients a second chance…just not as they originally thought. LateTIME was a study of adult stem cells (autologous) harnessed from bone marrow that were believed to have the ability to improve heart function after an attack if injected into the heart within two weeks of the attack. Results are being released today at American Heart Association Scientific Sessions and published this week in Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). The results ...

University Hospitals Case Medical Center unlocks mystery of dystonia with advanced imaging

2011-11-15
CLEVELAND -- An estimated 300,000 people in North America are afflicted with dystonia, a disorder characterized by a progressive loss of motor control. Patients with generalized dystonia grapple with involuntary muscle spasms that lead to uncontrolled twisting and turning in awkward, sometimes painful postures. Although cognition, intelligence and life span are often normal, the disorder can have a devastating impact on quality of life, as its victims frequently struggle to perform simple activities of daily living. At University Hospitals (UH) Case Medical Center's Neurological ...

Online Shopping Site Braces for Record 2011 Black Friday and Cyber Monday Sales

2011-11-15
Savvy consumers are set to benefit from shopping online during the 2011 holiday season. That's the outlook of the popular online shopping portal, http://www.CyberMondayDiscountCodes.com . The publisher of the website reports the country's top retailers are developing online deals for 2011 Black Friday and Cyber Monday that will rival anything they've ever offered before. "We're seeing more deep discounts and free shipping offers than in previous years", says Vic Salazar, the publisher of CyberMondayDiscountCodes.com. Salazar adds, "Retailers are recognizing ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Rutgers researchers revive decades-old pregnancy cohort with modern scientific potential

Rising CO2 likely to speed decrease in ‘space sustainability’ 

Study: Climate change will reduce the number of satellites that can safely orbit in space

Mysterious phenomenon at center of galaxy could reveal new kind of dark matter

Unlocking the secrets of phase transitions in quantum hardware

Deep reinforcement learning optimizes distributed manufacturing scheduling

AACR announces Fellows of the AACR Academy Class of 2025 and new AACR Academy President

TTUHSC’s Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences hosts 37th Student Research Week

New insights into plant growth

Female sex hormone protects against opioid misuse, rat study finds

Post-Dobbs decision changes in obstetrics and gynecology clinical workforce in states with abortion restrictions

Long-term effects of a responsive parenting intervention on child weight outcomes through age 9

COVID-19 pandemic and the developmental health of kindergarteners

New CAR-T cell therapy shows promise for hard-to-treat cancers

Scientists create a universal vascular graft with stem cells to improve surgery for cardiovascular disease

Facebook is constantly experimenting on consumers — and even its creators don’t fully know how it works

Intelligent covert communication: a leap forward in wireless security

Stand up to cancer adds new expertise to scientific advisory committee

‘You don’t just throw them in a box.’ Archaeologists, Indigenous scholars call on museums to better care for animal remains

Can AI tell us if those Zoom calls are flowing smoothly? New study gives a thumbs up

The Mount Sinai Hospital ranked among world’s best in Newsweek/Statista rankings

Research shows humans have a long way to go in understanding a dog’s emotions

Discovery: The great whale pee funnel

Team of computer engineers develops AI tool to make genetic research more comprehensive

Are volcanoes behind the oxygen we breathe?

The two faces of liquid water

The Biodiversity Data Journal launches its own data portal on GBIF

Do firefighters face a higher brain cancer risk associated with gene mutations caused by chemical exposure?

Less than half of parents think they have accurate information about bird flu

Common approaches for assessing business impact on biodiversity are powerful, but often insufficient for strategy design

[Press-News.org] High childhood IQ linked to subsequent illicit drug use