Division of Children's Health Promotion, Department of Community and Family Medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine, 20007, Washington, DC.
J Youth Adolesc. 1992 Jun;21(3):375-89. doi: 10.1007/BF01537024.
Determinants of the use of alcohol, alcohol without parental knowledge, cigarettes, marijuana, and crack were assessed in predominantly black, urban, fourth- and fifth-grade students. Each subject identified three best friends. Logistic and least-square regression analyses indicated that children's perceptions of friends' use, perceptions of family use, and actual use of classmates were better predictors of substance use than friends' actual use. The pattern of predictors suggested that peer behaviors and attitudes are more influential for children's socially censured behaviors such as using alcohol without parental permission than for more socially approved behaviors such as using alcohol with parental permission. The importance of perceived friends' use vs. friends' actual use supports Behavioral Intention Theory and Cognitive Developmental Theory, while the importance of classroom use supports Social Learning Theory or may reflect social and environmental conditions including neighborhood availability of drugs and neighborhood values regarding substance use.
本研究旨在评估主要为黑人、居住在城市、处于四五年级的学生使用酒精、未经父母知晓情况下饮酒、香烟、大麻和强效可卡因的决定因素。每个被试者都要确定三个最好的朋友。逻辑回归和最小二乘法回归分析表明,儿童对朋友使用的看法、对家庭使用的看法以及对同学实际使用的看法,比朋友的实际使用更能预测物质使用。预测因素的模式表明,同伴的行为和态度对儿童未经父母许可使用酒精等社会认可的行为更有影响,而对更受社会认可的行为(如经父母许可使用酒精)的影响较小。感知到的朋友使用与朋友实际使用的重要性支持行为意向理论和认知发展理论,而课堂使用的重要性支持社会学习理论,或者可能反映出社会和环境条件,包括社区毒品供应情况以及社区对物质使用的价值观。