Bahr Stephen J, Hoffmann John P, Yang Xiaoyan
Department of Sociology, Brigham Young University, Provo, USA.
J Prim Prev. 2005 Nov;26(6):529-51. doi: 10.1007/s10935-005-0014-8.
Using a probability sample of 4,230 adolescents from grades 7-12, we used negative binomial regression to estimate the effects of peer and six family variables on the risk of adolescent drug use. Peer drug use had relatively strong effects of adolescent drug use. Parental drug attitudes, sibling drug use, and adult drug use had significant direct effects net of peer influences. In addition, they had significant indirect effects that were mediated by peer drug use. The influences of parental monitoring, attachment to mother, and attachment to father were statistically significant but relatively small. The findings applied to alcohol, binge drinking, cigarettes, marijuana, and other illicit drugs. Editors' Strategic Implications: The authors interpret their findings as being more consistent with social learning than social control theory. This research, although cross-sectional and limited to adolescents' self-reports, contributes to a growing literature on the direct and indirect influences of parents on their teens' substance use rates. It speaks to the need for school- and community-based prevention efforts to focus on families as well as peers.
我们使用了一个从7至12年级抽取的4230名青少年的概率样本,运用负二项回归来估计同伴和六个家庭变量对青少年药物使用风险的影响。同伴药物使用对青少年药物使用有相对较强的影响。父母的药物态度、兄弟姐妹的药物使用以及成人的药物使用在排除同伴影响后有显著的直接影响。此外,它们还有通过同伴药物使用介导的显著间接影响。父母监督、与母亲的依恋以及与父亲的依恋的影响具有统计学意义,但相对较小。这些发现适用于酒精、暴饮、香烟、大麻和其他非法药物。编辑的战略启示:作者将他们的发现解释为比社会控制理论更符合社会学习理论。这项研究虽然是横断面研究且仅限于青少年的自我报告,但为关于父母对青少年物质使用率的直接和间接影响的不断增长的文献做出了贡献。它表明学校和社区预防工作需要关注家庭以及同伴。