Abar Caitlin C, Jackson Kristina M, Colby Suzanne M, Barnett Nancy P
Department of Psychology, SUNY Brockport, 350 New Campus Drive, Brockport, NY 14420, United States.
Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, Brown University, 121 South Main St., Providence, RI 02903, United States; Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, United States.
Addict Behav. 2014 Oct;39(10):1528-32. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2014.06.003. Epub 2014 Jun 18.
The current study sought to identify unique and common demographic and parental predictors of adolescent tobacco and alcohol initiation behaviors.
A total of 1023 middle school students (Grades 6-8) and their parents from six Rhode Island schools were enrolled in a larger study on substance use initiation and progression, with the current sample representing those dyads with data at baseline and at a 12-month follow-up (n=814 dyads). There was a relatively even split with regard to adolescent sex (nfemales=444; 55%). Comparisons were made between covariate and predictor associations with corresponding substance use behaviors (e.g., ever puffed a cigarette vs. ever sipped an alcoholic drink; ever smoked a whole cigarette vs. ever drank a full alcoholic drink).
At the bivariate level, a host of demographic and parent-related variables were associated with each adolescent substance use behavior. Adolescent reports of parental monitoring variables were consistently more related to use than parent reports. In multivariate logistic regression analyses, adolescent reports of parental monitoring variables were more frequently associated with tobacco use behaviors than alcohol use behaviors. Tobacco use behaviors were more strongly predicted by perceived availability of tobacco than alcohol use behaviors were predicted by perceived availability of alcohol.
The distinctive predictors observed for cigarette versus alcohol use make it problematic for new and existing programs to assume that efforts targeting specific individual or parental characteristics will impact both substances with equivalent efficacy.
本研究旨在确定青少年开始吸烟和饮酒行为的独特及共同的人口统计学和父母相关预测因素。
来自罗德岛州六所学校的1023名中学生(6至8年级)及其父母参与了一项关于物质使用起始和进展的大型研究,当前样本为在基线和12个月随访时有数据的二元组(n = 814个二元组)。青少年性别分布相对均匀(女性n = 444;55%)。对协变量和预测因素与相应物质使用行为(例如,曾经吸过烟与曾经喝过酒;曾经吸完整支烟与曾经喝完整杯酒)之间的关联进行了比较。
在双变量水平上,许多人口统计学和与父母相关的变量与青少年的每种物质使用行为相关。青少年报告的父母监督变量与使用行为的相关性始终高于父母报告。在多变量逻辑回归分析中,青少年报告的父母监督变量与吸烟行为的关联比与饮酒行为的关联更频繁。吸烟行为比饮酒行为更强烈地受到烟草可获得性的预测,饮酒行为则更强烈地受到酒精可获得性的预测。
观察到的吸烟与饮酒行为的独特预测因素使得新的和现有的项目难以假定针对特定个体或父母特征的努力将对两种物质产生同等效力的影响。