Abar Caitlin C, Turrisi Robert J, Mallett Kimberly A
Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, Brown University.
Biobehavioral Health & Prevention Research Center, The Pennsylvania State University.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2014 Mar;28(1):53-61. doi: 10.1037/a0032731. Epub 2013 Aug 5.
This study examined the extent to which profiles of perceived parenting are associated with trajectories of alcohol-related behaviors across the first year of college. Participants were surveyed five times from the summer before college to the fall of the second year. A total 285 college students were enrolled from the incoming classes of consecutive cohorts of students at a large, public university in the Northeastern United States. At baseline, participants provided information on their parents' alcohol-related behaviors (e.g., parental modeling of use; perceived approval of underage use) and parenting characteristics (e.g., parental monitoring; parent-child relationship quality). Students also reported on their personal alcohol-related behaviors at each time point. Latent profile analysis was used to identify four subgroups based on the set of parenting characteristics: High Quality (14%) - highest parent-teen relationship quality; High Monitoring (31%) - highest parental monitoring and knowledge; Low Involvement (30%) - poor relationship quality, little monitoring and communication; and Pro-Alcohol (21%) - highest parental modeling and approval. Students were then assigned to profiles, and their alcohol-related behaviors were examined longitudinally using latent growth curve modeling. In general, students in the Pro-Alcohol profile displayed the highest baseline levels of typical weekend drinking, heavy episodic drinking, and peak blood alcohol content, in addition to showing steeper increases in typical weekend drinking across the first year of college. Results support the notion that parental behaviors remain relevant across the first year of college. Differential alcohol-related behaviors across parenting profiles highlight the potential for tailored college intervention.
本研究考察了在大学一年级期间,感知到的养育方式概况与酒精相关行为轨迹之间的关联程度。从大学前的夏天到二年级的秋天,对参与者进行了五次调查。在美国东北部一所大型公立大学,从连续几届入学班级中招募了总共285名大学生。在基线时,参与者提供了关于其父母酒精相关行为(例如,父母的饮酒示范;对未成年人饮酒的感知认可)和养育特征(例如,父母的监督;亲子关系质量)的信息。学生们还在每个时间点报告了他们个人与酒精相关的行为。潜在剖面分析用于根据养育特征集识别四个亚组:高质量组(14%)——亲子关系质量最高;高监督组(31%)——父母监督和知识水平最高;低参与组(30%)——关系质量差,监督和沟通少;以及亲酒精组(21%)——父母的饮酒示范和认可程度最高。然后将学生分配到各个剖面,并使用潜在增长曲线模型纵向考察他们与酒精相关的行为。总体而言,亲酒精剖面的学生除了在大学一年级期间典型周末饮酒量增长更为显著外,还表现出典型周末饮酒、重度饮酒发作和血液酒精含量峰值的基线水平最高。结果支持了父母行为在大学一年级期间仍然具有相关性这一观点。不同养育剖面下与酒精相关的行为差异凸显了进行有针对性的大学干预的潜力。