Kiesner Jeff, Poulin François, Dishion Thomas J
Dipartimento di Psicologia dello Sviluppo e della Socializzazione, Università di Padova, Padova, Italy.
Merrill Palmer Q (Wayne State Univ Press). 2010 Oct;56(4):529-556. doi: 10.1353/mpq.2010.0002.
The influence of using substances with friends on future individual use was examined in the context of parental monitoring rules and the ecology of peer activities. A one-year longitudinal study design included a combined sample of North Italian and French Canadian adolescents (N = 285, 53% girls, M = 14.25 years). Data analyses were conducted using structural equation modeling and multiple regression analyses. As expected, the covariation between parental monitoring and adolescent substance use was mediated by "co-use" with friends. Moreover, the relation between substance use with friends and individual substance use was moderated by parental monitoring rules and the peer activity context. Specifically, the relation between substance co-use with friends and individual substance use was stronger when the level of parental monitoring rules was low and when friends spent their time together primarily in unstructured contexts such as on the street or in park settings. These findings underline the importance of adults' use of rules to monitor adolescents prone to substance use, and the role of context in facilitating or reducing peer influence.
在父母监管规则和同伴活动生态背景下,研究了与朋友一起使用物质对未来个人使用物质的影响。一项为期一年的纵向研究设计纳入了意大利北部和法裔加拿大青少年的混合样本(N = 285,53%为女孩,平均年龄14.25岁)。数据分析采用结构方程模型和多元回归分析。正如预期的那样,父母监管与青少年物质使用之间的协变由与朋友的“共同使用”介导。此外,与朋友一起使用物质和个人物质使用之间的关系受到父母监管规则和同伴活动背景的调节。具体而言,当父母监管规则水平较低且朋友主要在诸如街头或公园等无组织的环境中一起度过时间时,与朋友共同使用物质和个人物质使用之间的关系更强。这些发现强调了成年人利用规则来监管易使用物质的青少年的重要性,以及环境在促进或减少同伴影响方面的作用。