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Abstract
This study analyzed routine locations (activity spaces) of urban adolescents enrolled
in a substance abuse treatment program to understand the relationship between their
spatial lives and health outcomes such as substance use and mental health. Sixty-eight
adolescents were interviewed and produced a list of 199 locations identified as most
important, safe, and risky. A TwoStep Cluster analysis resulted in two mutually exclusive
groups of adolescents (n=58). Clusterwise importance analyses showed that sex, distress,
anxiety, emotional problems, and drug use significantly distinguish clusters from
each other. An important finding was that activity spaces vary according to the frequency
of substance use and the amount of emotional problems. School was frequently perceived
as a risky place - followed by friend's house and nature - for those who used alcohol
and marijuana more frequently and had more emotional distress. The intersection between
environment, emotion regulation, and health outcomes is discussed.