Department of Psychology, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA.
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA.
Dev Sci. 2024 Nov;27(6):e13539. doi: 10.1111/desc.13539. Epub 2024 Jun 21.
The present study examined whether internalizing and externalizing symptoms may mediate the association between adolescent-mother and adolescent-father attachment and substance use. The sample included 167 adolescents (47% girls) who were assessed at five time points with approximately 1 year between each assessment, beginning in middle adolescence (M= 14.07) and ending in the transition to young adulthood (M= 18.39). The adolescents reported their perceived attachment with both their mother and father during middle adolescence (Times 1 and 2), their internalizing and externalizing symptoms during late adolescence (Times 3 and 4), and their alcohol use during the transition to young adulthood (Time 5). The results showed that less secure adolescent-father attachment, but not adolescent-mother attachment, was predictive of heightened externalizing and internalizing symptoms. In turn, heightened externalizing symptoms were predictive of heightened alcohol use. Despite the nonsignificant direct association between adolescent-father attachment and alcohol use, less secure adolescent-father attachment was indirectly predictive of greater alcohol use, mediated through heightened externalizing symptoms. The findings highlight the importance of close and trusting father-adolescent relationships in the development of psychopathology and substance use behaviors. The developmental cascade from a less secure adolescent-father attachment to greater externalizing symptoms and heightened substance use, as well as implications for prevention and intervention of young adult substance use, are discussed. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS: The differential pathways from adolescent-mother and adolescent-father attachment to substance use during the transition to young adulthood are not well known. Longitudinal data were used to test whether internalizing and externalizing symptoms may mediate the association between adolescent-mother and adolescent-father attachment and substance use. Less secure adolescent-father attachment predicted heightened internalizing and externalizing symptoms, and less secure adolescent-father attachment predicted greater alcohol use, mediated through heightened externalizing symptoms. The findings suggest that addressing insecure attachment with fathers during adolescence may reduce unhealthy substance use during the transition to young adulthood.
本研究考察了青少年期与母亲和父亲的依恋关系是否可以作为中介变量,影响青少年期与母亲和父亲的依恋关系与物质使用之间的关联。该研究样本包括 167 名青少年(47%为女性),他们在大约一年的时间内接受了五次评估,从青少年中期(M=14.07)开始,一直持续到向成年早期的过渡阶段(M=18.39)。青少年在青少年中期(第 1 次和第 2 次评估)时报告了他们对母亲和父亲的感知依恋,在青少年后期(第 3 次和第 4 次评估)时报告了他们的内化和外化症状,在向成年早期的过渡阶段(第 5 次评估)时报告了他们的酒精使用情况。研究结果表明,与母亲相比,青少年与父亲的依恋关系不那么安全,会导致更高的外化和内化症状。反过来,更高的外化症状预示着更高的酒精使用量。尽管青少年与父亲的依恋与酒精使用之间没有显著的直接关联,但不那么安全的青少年与父亲的依恋关系可以通过外化症状的增加来间接预测更大的酒精使用量。研究结果强调了亲密和信任的父-青少年关系在心理病理学和物质使用行为发展中的重要性。讨论了从青少年与父亲的不那么安全的依恋关系到更大的外化症状和更高的物质使用之间的发展级联,以及对年轻成人物质使用预防和干预的影响。研究亮点:青少年期与母亲和父亲的依恋关系与向成年早期过渡期间物质使用之间的差异途径尚不清楚。本研究使用纵向数据来检验内化和外化症状是否可以作为青少年期与母亲和父亲的依恋关系与物质使用之间的关联的中介变量。不那么安全的青少年与父亲的依恋关系预测了更高的内化和外化症状,不那么安全的青少年与父亲的依恋关系预测了更高的酒精使用量,这是通过更高的外化症状来预测的。研究结果表明,在青少年期解决与父亲的不安全依恋关系可能会减少向成年早期过渡期间的不健康物质使用。