Suppr超能文献

未成年年轻女性的重度周期性饮酒轨迹:女性规范的作用。

Heavy Episodic Drinking Trajectories Among Underage Young Adult Women: The Role of Feminine Norms.

机构信息

Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland.

Department of Psychology, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona.

出版信息

Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2018 Mar;42(3):551-560. doi: 10.1111/acer.13582. Epub 2018 Feb 7.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Heavy episodic drinking (HED; 4 or more drinks in a 2-hour period) in U.S. college women has increased by 40% in the past 30 years. This dramatic shift suggests that women are "closing the gender gap" and are drinking at rates similar to men. Multidimensional feminine norms, or beliefs and expectations about what it means to be a woman, are theoretically promising and gender-relevant factors that may help account for within-group differences in problematic drinking patterns among this increasingly at-risk group. The aim of this study was to identify distinct developmental trajectories of HED among underage young adult women and examine the gender-relevant factors that predict these typologies.

METHODS

Growth mixture modeling was used to identify latent trajectory classes of HED over the course of a year (3 time points) in 700 underage (Wave 1, M  = 18, SD = 0.32) young adult women from a Mid-Atlantic university in the United States. Logistic regression analyses evaluated feminine norm endorsement, sorority status, perceived peer norms, expectancies, alcohol-related consequences, and marijuana use as predictors of the latent trajectory classes.

RESULTS

About 64.4% of underage women reported engaging in HED. Three HED latent trajectory classes were identified as follows: (i) High Risk, (31%) reported weekly HED over the course of the year; (ii) Monthly HED (33.4%) reported engaging in HED roughly once a month; and (iii) Abstainers (35.6%) reported no HED over the course of the year. The High-Risk class reported significantly more alcohol-related problems and marijuana use than the other trajectory classes. The multidimensional feminine norms of sexual fidelity and appearance were significantly associated with the latent trajectory classes even when controlling for well-established correlates of drinking.

CONCLUSIONS

High-risk drinking typologies were identified in underage women, and these trajectories were related to feminine norms. Prevention and intervention programs targeting gender-relevant factors may help reduce problematic drinking and marijuana use among underage women engaging in problematic patterns of drinking.

摘要

背景

在美国,大学生群体中重度周期性饮酒(HED;每两小时饮用 4 杯或以上酒精饮料)的比例在过去 30 年中增加了 40%。这一显著变化表明,女性正在“缩小性别差距”,饮酒率与男性相当。多维女性规范,即关于女性身份意义的信念和期望,是一个理论上有前途且与性别相关的因素,可能有助于解释这个风险日益增加的群体中,在饮酒模式方面存在的个体间差异。本研究旨在确定未成年年轻女性中 HED 的不同发展轨迹,并研究预测这些类型的与性别相关的因素。

方法

采用增长混合模型,对美国大西洋中部一所大学的 700 名未成年(第 1 波,M=18,SD=0.32)年轻女性在一年内(3 个时间点)的 HED 轨迹进行了分类。逻辑回归分析评估了女性规范的认可、联谊会成员身份、感知同伴规范、期望、酒精相关后果和大麻使用,作为预测潜在轨迹类别的因素。

结果

约 64.4%的未成年女性报告有 HED 行为。确定了三种 HED 潜在轨迹类别,分别是:(i)高风险,(31%)报告称在一年中每周都有 HED 行为;(ii)每月 HED(33.4%)报告称每月 HED 行为约一次;(iii)禁欲者(35.6%)报告称在一年中没有 HED 行为。高风险类别的女性报告了更多的酒精相关问题和大麻使用,比其他轨迹类别的女性更为严重。即使在控制了饮酒的既定相关因素后,多维女性规范中的性忠贞和外表规范仍然与潜在的轨迹类别显著相关。

结论

在未成年女性中确定了高风险饮酒类型,这些轨迹与女性规范有关。针对与性别相关的因素的预防和干预计划可能有助于减少未成年女性中饮酒和大麻使用问题。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验