Schulte Marya T, Ramo Danielle, Brown Sandra A
San Diego State University/University of California, San Diego Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology, San Diego, CA 92093-0109, USA.
Clin Psychol Rev. 2009 Aug;29(6):535-47. doi: 10.1016/j.cpr.2009.06.003. Epub 2009 Jun 11.
While prevalence rates for alcohol use and related disorders differ widely between adult men and women, male and female adolescents do not exhibit the same disparity in alcohol consumption. Previous research and reviews do not address the emergence of differences in drinking patterns that occur during late adolescence. Therefore, a developmental perspective is presented for understanding how various risk and protective factors associated with problematic drinking affect diverging alcohol trajectories as youth move into young adulthood. This review examines factors associated with risk for developing an alcohol use disorder in adolescent girls and boys separately. Findings indicate that certain biological (i.e., genetic risk, neurological abnormalities associated with P300 amplitudes) and psychosocial (i.e., impact of positive drinking expectancies, personality characteristics, and deviance proneness) factors appear to impact boys and girls similarly. In contrast, physiological and social changes particular to adolescence appear to differentially affect boys and girls as they transition into adulthood. Specifically, boys begin to manifest a constellation of factors that place them at greater risk for disruptive drinking: low response to alcohol, later maturation in brain structures and executive function, greater estimates of perceived peer alcohol use, and socialization into traditional gender roles. On an individual level, interventions which challenge media-driven stereotypes of gender roles while simultaneously reinforcing personal values are suggested as a way to strengthen adolescent autonomy in terms of healthy drinking decisions. Moreover, parents and schools must improve consistency in rules and consequences regarding teen drinking across gender to avoid mixed messages about acceptable alcohol use for boys and girls.
虽然成年男性和女性在酒精使用及相关障碍的患病率上存在很大差异,但男性和女性青少年在酒精消费方面并未表现出同样的差距。以往的研究和综述并未涉及青春期后期饮酒模式差异的出现。因此,本文从发展的角度来理解,随着年轻人步入青年期,与问题饮酒相关的各种风险和保护因素如何影响不同的饮酒轨迹。本综述分别考察了与青少年男孩和女孩患酒精使用障碍风险相关的因素。研究结果表明,某些生物学因素(即遗传风险、与P300波幅相关的神经学异常)和心理社会因素(即积极饮酒预期的影响、人格特征和偏差倾向)对男孩和女孩的影响似乎相似。相比之下,青春期特有的生理和社会变化在男孩和女孩向成年期过渡时似乎对他们有不同的影响。具体而言,男孩开始表现出一系列使他们面临更高扰乱性饮酒风险的因素:对酒精反应低、脑结构和执行功能成熟较晚、对同龄人饮酒量的估计过高,以及融入传统性别角色。在个体层面,建议采取干预措施,挑战媒体驱动的性别角色刻板印象,同时强化个人价值观,以此增强青少年在健康饮酒决策方面的自主性。此外,家长和学校必须提高关于青少年饮酒的规则和后果在性别上的一致性,以避免传递关于男孩和女孩可接受饮酒行为的矛盾信息。