%0 Journal Article %T The Association Between Early Exposure to Violence in Emerging Adulthood and Substance Use in Early %A Douglas R. Roehler %A Jose A. Bauermeister %A Justin E. Heinze %A Marc A. Zimmerman %A Sarah A. Stoddard %J Emerging Adulthood %@ 2167-6984 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/2167696817725455 %X This study investigated whether being exposed to violence early in life is a risk factor for substance use later in life. Tenets of the stress-coping model and the self-medication hypothesis guided the analyses. Participants included 850 individuals from an economically challenged, urban community in Flint, MI (83% Black/African American; 50% male). Exposure to violence was measured 4 times in sequential years during emerging adulthood (ages 20¨C23) and substance use 4 times during early adulthood (ages 29¨C32). Multilevel growth models investigated the relationship between early exposure to violence and later rates of substance use. Youth who had above-average exposure to violence during emerging adulthood had increasing substance use during early adulthood compared to those with a below-average score, after controlling for prior use. These findings may inform practitioners to screen for substance use among individuals exposed to violence and intervene earlier before substance use becomes problematic %K violence %K substance use/abuse %K alcohol use/abuse %K health behavior %K injury %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2167696817725455