Lopez Barbara, Wang Wei, Schwartz Seth J, Prado Guillermo, Huang Shi, Hendricks Brown C, Pantin Hilda, Szapocznik José
Miller School of Medicine, Cardiovascular Division, University of Miami, 1425 NW 10th Avenue, Miami, FL 33136, USA.
J Prim Prev. 2009 Nov;30(6):622-41. doi: 10.1007/s10935-009-0197-5.
The purpose of the present study was to examine how relationships among family, school, and peer factors relate to likelihood of substance use in Hispanic adolescents. Results indicated that only perceived peer substance use was directly related to adolescents' own substance use. A significant interaction was found between parental monitoring and peer use vis-à-vis substance use, which suggests that the relationship between parental monitoring and the adolescents' own use was significantly stronger among youth who reported that more of their friends used substances. Implications of these results for the design of substance use preventive interventions are discussed. Editors' Strategic Implications: This research is promising both in terms of the implications for targets of prevention programming and for the application of ecodevelopmental theory, which might guide similar efforts with different cultural groups.
本研究的目的是探讨家庭、学校和同伴因素之间的关系如何与西班牙裔青少年使用毒品的可能性相关。结果表明,只有感知到的同伴吸毒情况与青少年自身的吸毒行为直接相关。在父母监督和同伴吸毒行为之间发现了一个显著的交互作用,这表明在那些报告有更多朋友吸毒的青少年中,父母监督与青少年自身吸毒行为之间的关系显著更强。讨论了这些结果对毒品使用预防干预措施设计的启示。编辑的战略启示:这项研究在预防规划目标的启示以及生态发展理论的应用方面都很有前景,该理论可能会指导针对不同文化群体的类似工作。