家长对子女接触酒精的看法和行为:不同种族/民族、社会经济地位和社区的差异。

IF 3 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Carolyn E. Sartor, Shawn J. Latendresse, Kristina M. Jackson, Mai-Ly N. Steers, Sharon Lipperman-Kreda, Tim Slade, Tammy Chung
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:制定酒精使用规则并尽量减少其在家中的可得性是已知的降低未成年人饮酒风险的有效父母层面策略。然而,尽管有可能为有针对性的预防提供信息,但很少综合考虑父母的限制和他们对子女获得酒精的看法(例如,确定制定规则是否始终伴随着他们认为容易获得酒精的看法)。目前的研究确定了六种父母报告的儿童酒精限制和获取指标的模式,并根据种族/民族、社会经济地位、社区类型(城市、郊区或农村)和社区(dis)优势对其进行了表征。方法:对青少年大脑认知发展研究中黑人、拉丁裔和白人参与者的随访第二年数据(n = 9586;青年平均年龄= 12.05;47.50%女生,51.32%男生,0.32%其他性别;黑人占14.29%,拉丁裔占25.97%,白人占59.74%)。结果:出现了高限制/家庭中没有饮酒者(32.18%)、低限制/高接触(29.58%)、高限制/高接触(26.38%)和高限制/低接触(11.86%)四个剖面(亚组)。黑人和拉丁裔青年以及受教育程度和收入相对较低的父母在“高限制/家庭不饮酒者”和“高限制/低获取”亚组中所占比例过高。相比之下,低限制亚组主要由生活在优越社区的白人青年的父母组成。结论:研究结果支持这样一种观点,即父母对青少年饮酒的看法和行为不能简单地分为限制和允许。此外,观察到的人口统计和邻里因素的差异表明,调整父母层面的预防方法以考虑社区规范的价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Parents' perspectives and behaviors regarding their child's access to alcohol: Variation by race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and neighborhood

Parents' perspectives and behaviors regarding their child's access to alcohol: Variation by race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and neighborhood

Background

Setting rules about alcohol use and minimizing its availability in the home are known effective parent-level strategies for reducing underage drinking risk. However, parents' restrictions and their perceptions of their child's alcohol access have rarely been considered in combination (e.g., determining if rule-setting consistently accompanies perceived easy access), despite the potential to inform targeted prevention. The current study identified patterns in six parent-reported indicators of their child's alcohol restrictions and access and characterized them with respect to race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, community type (urban, suburban, or rural), and neighborhood (dis)advantage.

Methods

Latent profile analysis was applied to Follow-up Year 2 data from the parents of Black, Latinx, and White participants in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study (n = 9586; youth mean age = 12.05; 47.50% girl, 51.32% boy, 0.32% other gender; 14.29% Black, 25.97% Latinx, and 59.74% White) to derive distinct profiles.

Results

Four profiles (subgroups) emerged: High Restrictions/No Drinkers in Household (32.18%), Low Restrictions/High Access (29.58%), High Restrictions/High Access (26.38%), and High Restrictions/Low Access (11.86%). Black and Latinx youth and parents with relatively low educational attainment and income were overrepresented in the High Restrictions/No Drinkers in Household and High Restrictions/Low Access subgroups. By contrast, the low restrictions subgroups were composed primarily of parents of White youth living in advantaged neighborhoods.

Conclusions

Findings support the notion that parents' perspectives and behaviors around youth alcohol access cannot be divided simply into restrictive and permissive. Further, the observed differences by demographic and neighborhood factors suggest the value of tailoring parent-level prevention approaches to consider community norms.

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