Danzo Sarah, Connell Arin M, Stormshak Elizabeth A
Case Western Reserve University, Department of Psychological Sciences, 10900 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
University of Oregon, 262 HEDCO Education Building 5251, Eugene, OR 97403, USA.
J Adolesc. 2017 Apr;56:64-74. doi: 10.1016/j.adolescence.2017.01.007. Epub 2017 Feb 4.
Several studies examining alcohol use and depression in youth have focused on documenting prevalence of overlap, or temporal ordering in longitudinal samples. Fewer studies have examined pathways connecting alcohol use and depression over time. This study examined gender differences between depression and alcohol use across adolescence while examining peer and family pathways as possible mediators of effects. Data was collected longitudinally from 593 families from three urban public middle schools in the United States. Participants were recruited in 6th grade and followed through 9th grade. We examined gender differences using a nested model comparison approach. Results indicated the association between depression and alcohol use differs by gender. For males, depression and alcohol use were independent across adolescence, and no significant indirect pathways were observed. For females, bidirectional effects were found between alcohol use and depression, as well as an indirect effect from depression to alcohol use via peer deviance.
多项针对青少年饮酒与抑郁的研究聚焦于记录二者重叠的发生率,或纵向样本中的时间顺序。较少有研究探讨随时间推移连接饮酒与抑郁的路径。本研究考察了整个青春期抑郁与饮酒之间的性别差异,同时检验同伴和家庭路径作为可能的影响中介。数据是从美国三所城市公立中学的593个家庭纵向收集的。参与者在六年级时被招募,并跟踪到九年级。我们使用嵌套模型比较方法来检验性别差异。结果表明,抑郁与饮酒之间的关联因性别而异。对于男性而言,整个青春期抑郁与饮酒是独立的,未观察到显著的间接路径。对于女性而言,饮酒与抑郁之间存在双向影响,以及通过同伴偏差从抑郁到饮酒的间接影响。