Madkour Aubrey Spriggs, Clum Gretchen, Miles Thomas T, Wang Heng, Jackson Kristina, Mather Frances, Shankar Arti
Department of Global Community Health and Behavioral Sciences, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana.
Department of Global Community Health and Behavioral Sciences, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana.
J Adolesc Health. 2017 Aug;61(2):147-154. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2017.04.002.
The purpose of this study was to examine how parental relationship quality (communication frequency, time spent together, and closeness) during early adulthood is related to heavy episodic drinking (HED) during this developmental period and whether effects vary according to age, youth sex, or parent sex.
National data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics-Transition to Adulthood Study were analyzed. Youth participated in up to four interviews (2005, 2007, 2009, and 2011; n = 1,320-1,489) between ages 18-25 years. At each wave, respondents reported past-year HED and their communication frequency, time spent, and closeness with each parent (items combined into an index). We tested differences in parental effects by age, parent sex, and youth sex using multigroup latent curve models.
Paternal relationship quality was negatively associated with HED for both males and females at each age; associations did not vary by respondent age or sex (odds ratio [OR] = .73, 95% confidence interval [CI]: .63-.85). Maternal relationship quality was significantly negatively associated with HED at ages 18-19 years among both sexes equally (OR = .50, 95% CI: .41-.61). Although protective associations continued until the age of 25 years for males, they weakened and became nonsignificant at ages 20-25 years for females (OR = .87, 95% CI: .72-1.04). Findings were robust to inclusion of multiple covariates associated with both parenting and alcohol use.
Having close, communicative parental relationships seems protective against HED in early adulthood, although for females maternal effects appear limited to late adolescence. Programs to improve relationship quality between young adults and their parents may help curb problematic drinking during this vulnerable period.
本研究旨在探讨成年早期的亲子关系质量(沟通频率、共处时间和亲密程度)与该发育阶段的重度饮酒之间的关系,以及这些影响是否因年龄、青少年性别或父母性别而异。
分析了收入动态面板研究-向成年期过渡研究的全国性数据。青少年在18至25岁之间参与了多达四次访谈(2005年、2007年、2009年和2011年;n = 1320 - 1489)。在每次访谈中,受访者报告过去一年的重度饮酒情况以及他们与每位父母的沟通频率、共处时间和亲密程度(这些项目合并为一个指数)。我们使用多组潜在曲线模型测试了年龄、父母性别和青少年性别对父母影响的差异。
在每个年龄段,父亲的关系质量与男性和女性的重度饮酒均呈负相关;这种关联不因受访者年龄或性别而有所不同(优势比[OR] = 0.73,95%置信区间[CI]:0.63 - 0.85)。母亲的关系质量在18至19岁时与两性的重度饮酒均显著负相关(OR = 0.50,95% CI:0.41 - 0.61)。虽然男性在25岁之前这种保护关联一直存在,但在20至25岁时女性的这种关联减弱且变得不显著(OR = 0.87,95% CI:0.72 - 1.04)。纳入与养育和饮酒相关的多个协变量后,研究结果依然稳健。
拥有亲密、善于沟通的亲子关系似乎对成年早期的重度饮酒有保护作用,不过对女性而言,母亲的影响似乎仅限于青春期后期。改善年轻人与其父母之间关系质量的项目可能有助于在这个脆弱时期抑制有问题的饮酒行为。