# Hotspots: Understanding Areas of Concentrated Alcohol and Drug Problems at the US-Mexico Border

> **NIH NIH P50** · PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTE · 2020 · $128,811

## Abstract

ABSTRACT: Hotspots: Understanding Areas of Concentrated Alcohol and Drug Problems at the US-
 Mexico Border
Millions of Mexican Americans live in the US-Mexico border region, which is both an extremely disadvantaged
area and a staging zone for migration to the interior. Thus, the health and substance use patterns of Mexican-
origin border residents are of central concern. Nevertheless, despite preliminary evidence of high drug
trafficking, drug availability, and substance use problems along the border, very little is known about alcohol
and drug problems in this area. Our team recently initiated a large epidemiological study, the US-Mexico
Study of Alcohol and Related Conditions, or UMSARC (R01AA018365; PI's Cherpitel and Borges), to address
this gap. In addition to being one of only two large-scale epidemiological studies of the border addressing
alcohol, UMSARC is the only known such study to survey residents of both the US and Mexico. Data
represent 4,796 in-person interviews with a probability sample of Mexican and Mexican-origin individuals
interviewed between 2011-2013. Emerging papers based on UMSARC data suggest a heightened risk for
alcohol and drug problems, yet substantially lower substance use treatment utilization, at the US border,
compared to the interior. Yet, preliminary evidence also suggests dramatic, unexplained variation even among
border sites, with alcohol and drug problems being concentrated in a single US hotspot: Laredo, Texas.
Preliminary, unpublished analyses also point to Nuevo Laredo, Laredo's sister city, as a hotspot for drug
problems. This suggests that the local environment may play a critical role in alcohol and drug outcomes at
the border—and perhaps among Latinos generally. A deeper understanding of the role of environmental
factors in this apparent concentration of problems in border hotspots would help shed light on core processes
in the epidemiology of substance abuse as well as possible points of intervention relevant to Latinos in the
border region and more broadly. However, additional research is needed to 1) better characterize and
contextualize variation across UMSARC sites in alcohol- and drug-related outcomes; 2) delineate the roles of
specific environmental (and other) factors in explaining this variation; and 3) better understand pathways of
influence between the US and Mexico, and how US-Mexico interactions may contribute to elevations of
problems. The current project proposes to address these gaps. Aim 1 will better characterize the distribution
of alcohol use and problems, drug use and problems, and substance use treatment utilization across study
sites and relative to regional and national estimates. Aims 2 and 3 will involve geocoding the data to test roles
for key neighborhood variables in explaining geographic variation in alcohol- and drug- related outcomes. Aim
4 will directly explore potential pathways of influence between Mexico and the US using existing and geocoded
variables. Analyses ...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 9843634
- **Project number:** 5P50AA005595-40
- **Recipient organization:** PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTE
- **Principal Investigator:** SARAH E. ZEMORE
- **Activity code:** P50 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $128,811
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** — → 2021-02-28

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/9843634

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 9843634, Hotspots: Understanding Areas of Concentrated Alcohol and Drug Problems at the US-Mexico Border (5P50AA005595-40). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-23 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/9843634. Licensed CC0.

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