School of Social Work, Florida International University, 11200 SW 8th Street, Miami, FL, 33199, USA,
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2013 Dec;48(12):1873-87. doi: 10.1007/s00127-013-0710-2. Epub 2013 May 29.
In the USA, white children receive psychoactive drugs more often than black or Hispanic children. This study investigates whether cultural attitudes statistically mediate differences between American parents' self-identified racial-ethnic group membership and their willingness to medicate children for behavioral problems.
Using data from telephone interviews with 1,145 parents in two Florida counties, structural models tested associations between each group compared with the other, in willingness to medicate children exhibiting different problematic behaviors and hypothesized cultural (familism, fatalism, attitude toward corporal punishment, religiosity, concern about treatment stigma, birth abroad, language of interview) and other mediators (views about medications and causes of children's problems). Respondent gender, age, socioeconomic status, parent-type household, taking psychoactive medication, and having a child with behavioral problems were used as covariates.
Race-ethnicity was strongly associated with specific cultural attitudes and views about medications and problems, but only Hispanics distinguished themselves significantly from whites in willingness to medicate children. Across groups, parents who viewed medication favorably and endorsed biomedical causes for problems were more willing to medicate. In Hispanic-white and Hispanic-black comparisons, being interviewed in Spanish was the sole but modest cultural mediator of willingness, and in black-white comparisons, only concern about treatment stigma weakly mediated differences in willingness.
These findings provide faint support for a parent-centered cultural explanation of reported prescription differences among youths of different racial-ethnic groups in the USA. However, structural and professional components of a broader cultural hypothesis for such differences, within the USA and between different countries, still require evaluation.
在美国,白人儿童接受精神活性药物的频率高于黑人和西班牙裔儿童。本研究调查了美国父母的自我认同的种族群体成员身份与他们愿意为儿童的行为问题开药之间的差异是否在统计学上受到文化态度的影响。
使用佛罗里达州两个县的 1145 名父母的电话访谈数据,结构模型测试了与其他群体相比,每个群体与表现出不同问题行为的儿童用药意愿之间的关联,并假设了文化(家庭主义、宿命论、对体罚的态度、宗教信仰、对治疗耻辱感的关注、在国外出生、访谈语言)和其他中介因素(对药物和儿童问题原因的看法)。将受访者的性别、年龄、社会经济地位、父母类型家庭、服用精神活性药物以及有行为问题的儿童作为协变量。
种族和民族与特定的文化态度和对药物以及问题的看法密切相关,但只有西班牙裔在给儿童用药的意愿上与白人有显著差异。在所有群体中,对药物持积极态度并认同儿童问题的生物医学原因的父母更愿意给孩子用药。在西班牙裔-白人和西班牙裔-黑人的比较中,用西班牙语进行访谈是唯一但适度的文化中介因素,而在黑人和白人的比较中,只有对治疗耻辱感的关注微弱地调节了用药意愿的差异。
这些发现为在美国不同种族和民族的青少年报告的处方差异的以父母为中心的文化解释提供了微弱的支持。然而,在美国和不同国家之间,更广泛的文化假设的结构和专业成分,仍需要评估。