Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, 389 Whitney Avenue, New Haven, CT, 06511, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, 3811 O'Hara Street, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2020 Apr;55(4):447-456. doi: 10.1007/s00127-020-01830-y. Epub 2020 Jan 11.
This longitudinal study aimed to identify variation by race in the associations between religious involvement and initiation of alcohol, cigarette, and marijuana use, including distinctions by substance or type of religious involvement, in Black and White adolescent girls.
Data were drawn from interviews conducted at ages 11 through 17 with 2172 Pittsburgh Girls Study participants (56.8% Black; 43.2% White). Two indicators of public religious involvement, religious service attendance and participation in other religious activities, and two indicators of private religious involvement, prayer, and importance of religion were queried. A series of Cox proportional hazards regression analyses were conducted to identify independent effects of religious involvement indicators on initiation of each substance.
Prior to adjusting for socioenvironmental and psychosocial factors (e.g., parental monitoring), importance of religion predicted initiation of alcohol use across race and cigarette and marijuana use in White but not Black girls. Participation in other religious activities also predicted marijuana use initiation only in White girls. In adjusted models, importance of religion remained significant for cigarette use initiation in White girls (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.68, 95% confidence intervals [CI]: 0.53-0.88) and participation in other religious activities remained significant for marijuana use initiation in White girls (HR = 0.63, CI: 0.47-0.83).
The protective effects of religious involvement against cigarette and marijuana use initiation are more robust for White than Black adolescent girls and overall relatively weak for alcohol use initiation. Furthermore, importance placed on religion may be a better indicator than religious service attendance of risk for adolescent substance use initiation.
本纵向研究旨在确定种族差异对宗教参与与青少年开始饮酒、吸烟和使用大麻之间关联的影响,包括按物质或宗教参与类型区分的差异,研究对象为黑人和白人青少年女孩。
数据来自匹兹堡女孩研究 2172 名参与者在 11 岁至 17 岁期间进行的访谈(56.8%为黑人;43.2%为白人)。调查了公共宗教参与的两个指标,即参加宗教服务和参与其他宗教活动,以及私人宗教参与的两个指标,即祈祷和宗教的重要性。进行了一系列 Cox 比例风险回归分析,以确定宗教参与指标对每种物质开始使用的独立影响。
在调整社会环境和心理社会因素(例如,父母监督)之前,宗教的重要性预测了所有种族的青少年开始饮酒,以及白人女孩开始吸烟和使用大麻,但黑人女孩则不然。参与其他宗教活动也仅预测白人女孩开始使用大麻。在调整后的模型中,宗教的重要性仍然对白人女孩开始吸烟(危险比[HR]为 0.68,95%置信区间[CI]为 0.53-0.88)和白人女孩开始使用大麻(HR 为 0.63,CI 为 0.47-0.83)有显著影响。
宗教参与对青少年开始吸烟和使用大麻的保护作用对白种人青少年女孩比黑人青少年女孩更为显著,而对酒精使用开始的保护作用总体上相对较弱。此外,对宗教的重视可能比参加宗教服务更能预测青少年物质使用开始的风险。