Canino Glorisa, Vega William A, Sribney William M, Warner Lynn A, Alegría Margarita
Behavioral Sciences Research Institute and the Department of Pediatrics, University of Puerto Rico.
J Drug Issues. 2008;38(1):69-101. doi: 10.1177/002204260803800104.
Based on social control perspectives and results from prior studies we test hypotheses about the extent to which characteristics of family and social networks are associated with substance use disorders (SUD), and whether these associations vary by sex. In this study SUD is alcohol or illicit drug abuse or dependence as defined by criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association. With nationally representative data of adult Latinos from the National Latino and Asian American Survey (NLAAS), we found that respondents' language use with family, rather than language proficiency, appears to be a more efficient proxy for social assimilation to represent differential levels of risk of SUD. SUD was positively associated with problematic family relations for men but not women, and SUD was positively associated with more frequent interactions with friends for women but not men. The results suggest that the salient features of social assimilation associated with SUD include the context of language use and transformations in family and social network relationships that differ in important ways between Latino men and women.
基于社会控制视角和先前研究的结果,我们检验了关于家庭和社会网络特征在多大程度上与物质使用障碍(SUD)相关联,以及这些关联是否因性别而异的假设。在本研究中,SUD是指根据美国精神病学协会《诊断与统计手册》标准定义的酒精或非法药物滥用或依赖。利用来自全国拉丁裔和亚裔美国人调查(NLAAS)的具有全国代表性的成年拉丁裔数据,我们发现,受访者与家人的语言使用情况,而非语言能力,似乎是社会同化的更有效指标,用以代表不同程度的SUD风险。SUD与男性的不良家庭关系呈正相关,但与女性无关;SUD与女性更频繁地与朋友互动呈正相关,但与男性无关。结果表明,与SUD相关的社会同化的显著特征包括语言使用背景以及家庭和社会网络关系的变化,而这些在拉丁裔男性和女性之间存在重要差异。