Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, Richmond, Virginia.
Department of Psychiatry, Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, Richmond, Virginia.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2018 May;79(3):370-379. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2018.79.370.
This study seeks to clarify the nature of the association between five well-studied late childhood predictors and alcohol-related behaviors in adolescence.
We examined, in 7,168 subjects from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC), using linear probability and marginal structural models, the association between parental alcohol problems, peer group deviance, antisocial behavior, and low parental monitoring, and sensation seeking assessed at multiple times from ages 12.5 to 18 years and heavy episodic drinking and alcohol problems at ages 16.5, 17.5, and 20 years.
Based on the pattern of the attenuation in the association with heavy episodic drinking and alcohol problems from the linear probability to marginal structural models, our five factors were divisible into three groups. For parental alcohol problems, no substantial attenuation was seen. For peer group deviance and antisocial behavior, the associations in the marginal structural models were modestly attenuated (10%-20%). By contrast, for low parental monitoring and sensation seeking, moderate attenuations of 41% and 35%, respectively, were observed.
Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that all or nearly all of the association between parental alcohol problems and heavy episodic drinking and alcohol problems in mid to late adolescence is causal. For peer group deviance and antisocial behavior, the large majority of the associations appear to be causal, but confounding influences are also present. However, for low parental monitoring and sensation seeking, our findings suggest that a substantial proportion of the observed association with alcohol outcomes reflects confounding rather than causal influences.
本研究旨在阐明在儿童晚期得到充分研究的五个预测因素与青少年期酒精相关行为之间的关联性质。
我们在来自阿冯纵向研究父母与子女(ALSPAC)的 7168 名受试者中,使用线性概率和边缘结构模型,研究了父母酗酒问题、同伴群体偏差、反社会行为和父母监督不足以及在 12.5 至 18 岁期间多次评估的感觉寻求与 16.5 岁、17.5 岁和 20 岁时的重度饮酒和酒精问题之间的关联。
根据线性概率模型到边缘结构模型中与重度饮酒和酒精问题的关联减弱的模式,我们的五个因素可以分为三组。对于父母酗酒问题,没有明显的减弱。对于同伴群体偏差和反社会行为,边缘结构模型中的关联略有减弱(10%-20%)。相比之下,对于父母监督不足和感觉寻求,分别观察到 41%和 35%的适度减弱。
我们的结果与假设一致,即父母酗酒问题与青少年中期和后期的重度饮酒和酒精问题之间的全部或几乎全部关联均具有因果关系。对于同伴群体偏差和反社会行为,大多数关联似乎具有因果关系,但也存在混杂影响。然而,对于父母监督不足和感觉寻求,我们的研究结果表明,观察到的与酒精结果之间的关联,很大一部分反映了混杂因素,而不是因果关系。