Eitle Tamela McNulty, Johnson-Jennings Michelle, Eitle David J
Soc Sci Res. 2013 Nov;42(6):1467-1479. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2013.06.007.
Competing explanations of the relationship between family structure and alcohol use problems are examined using a sample of American Indian adolescents from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Living in a single-parent family is found to be a marker for the unequal distribution of stress exposure and parental alcohol use, but the effects of other family structures like non-parent families and the presence of under 21-year-old extended family or non-family members emerge or remain as risk or protective factors for alcohol use problems after a consideration of SES, family processes, peer socialization, and social stress. In particular, a non-parent family structure that has not been considered in prior research emerged as a protective family structure for American Indian adolescent alcohol use problems.
利用来自青少年健康全国纵向研究的美国印第安青少年样本,对家庭结构与酒精使用问题之间关系的相互竞争的解释进行了研究。研究发现,生活在单亲家庭是压力暴露和父母酒精使用不平等分布的一个标志,但在考虑社会经济地位(SES)、家庭过程、同伴社会化和社会压力之后,其他家庭结构(如非父母家庭以及21岁以下大家庭或非家庭成员的存在)的影响作为酒精使用问题的风险或保护因素出现或仍然存在。特别是,一种先前研究中未被考虑的非父母家庭结构,成为美国印第安青少年酒精使用问题的一种保护型家庭结构。