父母和青少年对父母知识的看法:拉美裔样本对近期药物使用的独特影响。

IF 2.1 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Journal of Latinx Psychology Pub Date : 2021-08-01 Epub Date: 2021-04-01 DOI:10.1037/lat0000155
Olalla Cutrín, Stephen S Kulis, Stephanie L Ayers, Justin Jager, Flavio F Marsiglia
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究的主要目的是分析父母和子女对子女行踪、活动和交友情况的独特看法与青少年四个月后最近的药物使用情况之间的关系。研究还探讨了父母和子女之间以及男性和女性青少年之间的差异。数据来自美国亚利桑那州的一个拉丁裔样本(主要是墨西哥裔),共有 523 个父母与青少年的二元组合,采用了多信息方法(父母和青少年报告)。结果表明,家长(尤其是母亲)报告的家长知识水平高于青少年。全部样本的结构方程建模(SEM)结果表明,父母和青少年对父母知识水平的独特看法与青少年四个月后最近使用酒精和大麻的情况呈负相关。此外,按性别划分的多组 SEM 结果表明,父母对父母知识水平较高的独特认知与男性和女性较低的酒精使用率仅有微弱关系,而青少年的独特认知与男性和女性的酒精和大麻使用率(显著)以及烟草使用率(微弱)呈负相关。在父母知识对药物使用的影响方面,没有发现明显的性别差异。研究结果表明,父母和青少年的认知似乎是截然不同且相互独立的。本文讨论了这些结果对预防药物使用干预计划的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Perception of Parental Knowledge by Parents and Adolescents: Unique Effects on Recent Substance Use in a Latinx Sample.

The main objective of the current study is to analyze how the unique perspectives from both parents and children in regards to parental knowledge of the child's whereabouts, activities, and friendships are related to the adolescent's recent substance use four months later. Differences between parents and children, as well as between male and female adolescents are examined. Data come from a Latinx sample (mostly Mexican-origin) of 523 parent-adolescent dyads from Arizona (US) using a multi-informant approach (parent and adolescent reports). The results indicate that parents, especially mothers, report higher levels of parental knowledge than adolescents do. The structural equation modeling (SEM) results for the total sample indicate that both parents' and adolescents' unique perception of the level of parental knowledge is negatively related to the adolescents' recent alcohol and cannabis use four months later. Further, multi-group SEM results split by gender indicate that parents' unique perception of higher levels of parental knowledge is only marginally related to lower alcohol use for both males and females, whereas adolescents' unique perception is negatively related to alcohol and cannabis use (significantly) and tobacco use (marginally) for both males and females. No significant gender differences were found in the effects of parental knowledge on substance use. Findings suggest that parents' and adolescents' perceptions seem to be quite distinctive and independent from each other. Implications of these results regarding intervention programs for preventing substance use are discussed.

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