The goal of the Rural Stimulant Use and Mental Health: Services and Outcomes natural history study of rural stimulant users is to highlight the critical role of co-occurring mental disorders in drug use and health services use, including mental health services. This project is a cooperative effort between the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock, Arkansas, the University of Kentucky in Lexington, Kentucky, and Wright State University (R01DA115363-02) Brenda M. Booth, Ph.D., Principal Investigator.
Submissions from 2007
Perceived Need for Substance Abuse Treatment Among Illicit Stimulant Drug Users in Rural Areas of Ohio, Arkansas, and Kentucky, Russel S. Falck, Jichuan Wang, Robert G. Carlson, Laura L. Krishnan, Carl G. Leukefeld, and Brenda M. Booth
Multi-Sample Standardization and Decomposition Analysis: An Application to Comparisons of Methamphetamine Use Among Rural Drug Users in Three American States, Jichuan Wang, Robert G. Carlson, Russel S. Falck, Carl G. Leukefeld, and Brenda M. Booth
Submissions from 2006
Correlates of Rural Methamphetamine and Cocaine Users: Results from a Multistate Community Study, Brenda M. Booth, Carl G. Leukefeld, Russel S. Falck, Jichuan Wang, and Robert G. Carlson
Methamphetamine Use and Adverse Consequences in the Rural Southern United States: An Ethnographic Overview, Rocky L. Sexton, Robert G. Carlson, Carl G. Leukefeld, and Brenda M. Booth
Patterns of Illicit Methamphetamine Production ("Cooking") and Associated Risks in the Rural South: An Ethnographic Exploration, Rocky L. Sexton, Robert G. Carlson, Carl G. Leukefeld, and Brenda M. Booth
The Role of African-American Clergy in Providing Informal Services to Drug Users in the Rural South: Preliminary Ethnographic Findings, Rocky L. Sexton, Robert G. Carlson, Harvey A. Siegal, Carl G. Leukefeld, and Brenda M. Booth
Submissions from 2005
Barriers and Pathways to Diffusion of Methamphetamine Use Among African Americans in the Rural South: Preliminary Ethnographic Findings, Rocky L. Sexton, Robert G. Carlson, Russel S. Falck, Carl G. Leukefeld, and Brenda M. Booth