Voisine Sarah, Parsai Monica, Marsiglia Flavio F, Kulis Stephen, Nieri Tanya
Fam Soc. 2008 Apr;89(2):264-273. doi: 10.1606/1044-3894.3742.
The prevention literature has given little attention to how parental influences affect substance use among Mexican origin adolescents, even though they form part of the largest ethnic minority group in the United States. This study explored the effects of three types of parental influences-parental monitoring of the child's whereabouts, degree of parental permissiveness, and the strength of parental injunctive norms discouraging substance use-on alcohol, cigarette, and marijuana use and anti-drug norms. Results showed that parental permissiveness and parental injunctive norms, particularly anti-drug injunctive norms, had the strongest effects on the substance use outcomes, but parental monitoring generally was not a significant predictor. These results and implications for prevention are discussed in light of Mexican cultural norms toward substance use, gender roles, and family roles.
预防方面的文献很少关注父母的影响如何影响墨西哥裔青少年的物质使用情况,尽管他们是美国最大的少数族裔群体的一部分。本研究探讨了三种父母影响因素——父母对孩子行踪的监控、父母的宽容程度以及父母劝阻物质使用的禁令规范的强度——对酒精、香烟和大麻使用以及反毒品规范的影响。结果表明,父母的宽容程度和父母的禁令规范,特别是反毒品禁令规范,对物质使用结果的影响最强,但父母的监控通常不是一个显著的预测因素。根据墨西哥文化对物质使用、性别角色和家庭角色的规范,讨论了这些结果及其对预防的启示。