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Rüssel S. Falck

3 papers in the library · 113 citations · publishing 2004-2007

Papers

MDMA/Ecstasy Use Among Young People in Ohio: Perceived Risk and Barriers to Intervention

Journal of Psychoactive Drugs June 1, 2004 Robert G. Carlson, Rüssel S. Falck, Jill A. McCaughan et al. 49 citations

Most active Ecstasy users do not associate the drug with risks of neurotoxicity or psychological problems, beyond the danger of obtaining a deadly substitute. Based on audiotaped focus groups and individual interviews with 30 users in Ohio, users instead seek harm-reduction strategies for safe use and largely ignore prevention messages like "just say no." Because Ecstasy is often used in small friend groups, interventions involving peer leaders or social networks may be effective.

Depressive symptomatology in young adults with a history of MDMA use: a longitudinal analysis

Journal of Psychopharmacology August 22, 2007 Rüssel S. Falck, Jichuan Wang, Robert G. Carlson 45 citations

Among 402 young adult MDMA users followed for two years, depressive symptoms measured by the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II) declined from an average score of 9.8 at baseline to 7.7 at 24 months, decreasing by 0.36 points every six months. People with higher initial scores showed greater declines. Men and white participants had lower scores than women and non-whites; those with some university education had lower scores than those without. Current benzodiazepine or opioid users and people who had used MDMA more than 50 times had higher scores. The low and declining average scores suggest that for most people, MDMA use does not lead to long-term depressive symptoms.

The Prevalence of Dextromethorphan Abuse Among High School Students

PEDIATRICS November 1, 2006 Rüssel S. Falck, Linna Li, Robert H. Carlson et al. 19 citations

Among 2,437 12th-grade students in the Dayton, Ohio area, 4.9% reported having used dextromethorphan to get high at least once in their lifetime, and 3.7% reported use in the past year. Among 1,739 11th-grade students, 3.4% reported lifetime use and 2.4% past-year use. Boys were significantly more likely than girls to use the drug, while no significant differences were found between white and nonwhite adolescents. Dextromethorphan users were also more likely to smoke cigarettes, drink alcohol heavily, and use marijuana and other illicit drugs. The lifetime prevalence among 12th-graders exceeded that for several other drugs, including anabolic steroids, MDMA, heroin, crack cocaine, and Ritalin.