Goings Trenette Clark, Hidalgo Sebastian J Teran, McGovern Tricia
School of Social Work, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, , 325 Pittsboro Street, CB 3550, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, United States.
Department of Biostatistics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 135 Dauer Drive, 3101 McGavran-Greenberg Hall, CB 7420, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, United States.
Addict Behav. 2016 Sep;60:13-7. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2016.03.013. Epub 2016 Mar 26.
Using National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent and Adult Health (Add Health) data, we examine the alcohol-use trajectories of monoracial Black youth and biracial Black-White, Black-Hispanic, and Black-American Indian youth to assess how their trajectories differ from the alcohol-use trajectories of White youth over time. The sample consists of 9421 adolescents and young adults who self-identified as White, Black, Black-American Indian, Black-Hispanic, or Black-White. Study hypotheses are tested using latent growth curve modeling. Results indicate that a catch-up effect exists, but only for Black-American Indians whose alcohol-use rates approach the higher rates of Whites at age 29. Black-American Indians face particularly high risk of problematic drinking over the life course. Additional research is needed to understand causal factors of alcohol-use among biracial individuals particularly Black-American Indians who may be at higher risk for alcohol misuse.
利用青少年及成人健康全国纵向研究(Add Health)的数据,我们研究了单一种族的黑人青年以及黑人与白人、黑人与西班牙裔、黑人与美国印第安人混血青年的饮酒轨迹,以评估随着时间推移,他们的轨迹与白人青年的饮酒轨迹有何不同。样本包括9421名自我认定为白人、黑人、美国印第安黑人、西班牙裔黑人或黑白混血的青少年和青年。研究假设通过潜在增长曲线模型进行检验。结果表明存在追赶效应,但仅适用于美国印第安黑人,他们在29岁时的饮酒率接近白人的较高水平。美国印第安黑人在整个生命历程中面临着特别高的问题性饮酒风险。需要进行更多研究来了解混血个体尤其是可能有更高酒精滥用风险的美国印第安黑人饮酒的因果因素。