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Samantha M Ross-Cypcar

Department of Special Education, College of Education, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA. Electronic address: samantha.ross@utah.edu.

2 papers in the library · 4 citations · publishing 2025

Papers

Illicit drug use among adolescents and young adults with impairments in the US: A cross-sectional analysis of the National Survey on Drug Use And Health.

Preventive medicine February 1, 2025 Justin A Haegele, Samantha M Ross-Cypcar, Jeanette M Garcia 4 citations

Adolescents and adults with impairments (mobility, cognitive, hearing, vision, self-care, or communication) in the US are more than twice as likely to use illicit drugs as those without impairments. Among emerging adults, hallucinogens were the most commonly used drug in the past year, with 12.8% of those with impairments reporting use compared to 7.1% of those without. People with impairments first tried an illicit drug at an average age of 16.2 years, significantly younger than the average of 18.1 years for peers without impairments. The findings suggest that disability status is associated with elevated and earlier illicit drug use.

Hallucinogenic drug use and depression, psychological distress and suicidality among disabled adults in the US.

Addictive behaviors November 1, 2025 Samantha M Ross-Cypcar, Justin A Haegele, Jeanette M Garcia

Among disabled adults, past-year hallucinogen use is more common (8.37%) than among nondisabled adults (4.86%). Of disabled adults who used hallucinogens, nearly half reported a major depressive episode, over two-thirds reported serious psychological distress, and about 40% reported suicidal thinking, planning, or attempt. About 4% said hallucinogen use worsened or caused emotional or mental health problems. The findings come from a nationally representative sample of adults aged 18–50.