青少年资产与酒精、烟草及其他药物的使用:家庭结构的重要性。

Journal of prevention (2022) Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Epub Date: 2024-02-23 DOI:10.1007/s10935-024-00775-1
Louisiana M Sanchez, Roy F Oman, Yueran Yang, Taylor Lensch
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这项研究分析了 "青少年资产研究"(YAS)的数据。"青少年资产研究 "是一项为期四年的纵向调查,旨在研究青少年资产对青少年风险行为的预期影响。其目的是确定特定的青少年资产(如负责任的选择、家庭沟通、社区参与)是否会根据家庭结构(单亲家庭和双亲家庭)的不同而对青少年的酗酒、吸烟和使用其他药物(ATODU)产生不同的保护作用。在四年时间里,每年从不同种族/族裔的青少年样本中收集五波数据(样本数=722,51.5%为男性,基线平均年龄=14.1岁)。采用皮尔逊卡方检验法检验单亲家庭和双亲家庭在资产流行率方面是否存在显著差异。在对家庭结构进行分层并控制社会人口特征的情况下,我们使用了广义线性混合模型来确定17种青少年资产与ATODU之间的前瞻性关联。与生活在单亲家庭的青少年相比,生活在双亲家庭的青少年更有可能拥有17项资产中的6项。在单亲家庭的青少年中,拥有八项青少年资产中任何一项的青少年使用ATODU的可能性明显较低。在单亲家庭的青少年中,拥有七项资产中任何一项的青少年使用 ATODU 的可能性明显较低。对于生活在单亲家庭中的青少年来说,家庭和社区层面的资产与使用ATODU之间的关系最为显著(相关系数从0.23到0.61不等)。对于生活在双亲家庭中的青少年来说,个人层面的资产与资产/ATODU 的关系最为显著(相关系数在 0.38 至 0.60 之间)。研究结果表明,针对青少年的家庭结构制定以资产为基础的干预措施可能有助于防止青少年参与ATODU。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Youth Assets and Alcohol, Tobacco, and Other Drug Use: The Importance of Family Structure.

This research analyzed data from the Youth Asset Study (YAS), a 4-year longitudinal investigation designed to examine the prospective influence of youth assets, which are believed to influence behavior at the individual, family, and community levels, on youth risk behaviors. The purpose was to determine if specific youth assets (e.g., responsible choices, family communication, community involvement) differentially protected adolescents from alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use (ATODU) according to family structure (one-parent and two-parent households). Five waves of data were collected annually over four years from a racially/ethnically diverse sample of adolescents (N = 722, 51.5% male, baseline mean age = 14.1 years). Pearson chi-square tests for independence were used to test for significant differences in the prevalence of assets between one-parent and two-parent households. Generalized linear mixed models were used to identify prospective associations between 17 youth assets and ATODU while stratifying by family structure and controlling for sociodemographic characteristics. Compared to adolescents living in one-parent households, adolescents living in two-parent households were significantly more likely to possess six of 17 assets. Among adolescents living in one-parent households, those who possessed any one of eight youth assets were significantly less likely to use ATODU. Among adolescents living in one-parent households, those with any one of seven assets were significantly less likely to use ATODU. Family- and community-level assets had the most significant asset/ATODU associations for adolescents living in one-parent households (AORs ranged from 0.23 to 0.61). Individual-level assets had the most significant asset/ATODU associations for adolescents living in two-parent households (AORs ranged from 0.38 to 0.60). The results suggest that developing asset-based interventions tailored to the adolescents' family structure may be useful in preventing adolescents from engaging in ATODU.

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