Kerr David C R, Tiberio Stacey S, Capaldi Deborah M
School of Psychological Science, Oregon State University, 213 Reed Lodge, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA; Oregon Social Learning Center, 10 Shelton McMurphey Blvd., Eugene, OR 97401, USA.
Oregon Social Learning Center, 10 Shelton McMurphey Blvd., Eugene, OR 97401, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2015 Sep 1;154:222-8. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2015.06.041. Epub 2015 Jul 2.
We studied the extent to which parent marijuana use in adolescence is associated with marijuana use onset in offspring through contextual family and peer risks.
Fathers assessed (n=93) since childhood, their 146 offspring (n=83 girls), and offspring's mothers (n=85) participated in a longitudinal study. Using discrete-time survival analysis, fathers' (prospectively measured) and mothers' (retrospective) adolescent marijuana use was used to predict offspring marijuana use onset through age 19 years. Parental monitoring, child exposure to marijuana use, peer deviance, peer marijuana use, and perceptions of parent disapproval of child use were measured before or concurrent with onset.
Parents' adolescent marijuana use was significantly associated with less monitoring, offspring alcohol use, the peer behaviors, exposure to adult marijuana use, and perceptions of less parent disapproval. Male gender and the two peer behaviors were positively associated with children's marijuana use onset, controlling for their alcohol use. Parents' adolescent marijuana use had a significant indirect effect on child onset through children's deviant peer affiliations and a composite contextual risk score.
Parents' histories of marijuana use may contribute indirectly to children's marijuana use onset through their influence on the social environments children encounter; specifically, those characterized by more liberal use norms, exposure to marijuana use and deviant and marijuana-using peers, and less adult supervision. Given that alcohol use onset was controlled, findings suggest that the contextual factors identified here confer unique risk for child marijuana use onset.
我们研究了青少年时期父母使用大麻与子女使用大麻起始之间通过家庭背景和同伴风险的关联程度。
自童年起接受评估的93名父亲、他们的146名子女(83名女孩)以及子女的85名母亲参与了一项纵向研究。使用离散时间生存分析,父亲(前瞻性测量)和母亲(回顾性)青少年时期使用大麻的情况被用于预测子女到19岁时使用大麻的起始情况。在起始之前或同时测量父母监督、孩子接触大麻使用情况、同伴偏差行为、同伴使用大麻情况以及对父母不赞成孩子使用大麻的认知。
父母青少年时期使用大麻与较少的监督、子女饮酒、同伴行为、接触成人使用大麻以及认为父母较少不赞成显著相关。在控制子女饮酒情况后,男性性别和两种同伴行为与孩子使用大麻起始呈正相关。父母青少年时期使用大麻通过孩子与偏差同伴的关系以及一个综合背景风险评分对孩子使用大麻起始有显著间接影响。
父母使用大麻的历史可能通过对孩子所接触的社会环境的影响间接导致孩子使用大麻起始;具体而言,这些社会环境的特点是使用规范更宽松、接触大麻使用以及偏差和使用大麻的同伴,且成人监督较少。鉴于饮酒起始情况已得到控制,研究结果表明这里确定的背景因素为孩子使用大麻起始带来了独特风险。