Hatch Oliver J, Trager Bradley M, LaBrie Joseph W, Neighbors Clayton, Mallett Kimberly A, Turrisi Rob
Department of Psychological Science, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Department of Psychological Science, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Addict Behav. 2025 Apr;163:108244. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2024.108244. Epub 2025 Jan 2.
Parental permissiveness of drinking is a reliable predictor of college drinking, but there is little known about factors that predict such permissiveness. This study seeks to examine factors that predict two potentially different facets of permissiveness: perceived general approval of alcohol use and perceived drinking limits. Additionally, we explored how these facets mediate the relationship between the predictors of permissiveness and subsequent college drinking and related consequences. First-year college students (N = 1,172) from three large U.S. universities participated in a three-year longitudinal study (surveys were approximately 1 year apart). The students reported demographic information (i.e., birth sex, race, ethnicity), perceived injunctive peer norms, drinking outcomes (i.e., peak, heavy episodic drinking, and consequences), and perceived maternal behaviors (i.e., modeling alcohol use, monitoring, alcohol communication) and attitudes toward drinking (i.e., general approval and drinking limits). Results indicated that being White (compared to Asian and Black) predicted higher perceived maternal general approval of alcohol use and higher perceived maternal drinking limits during students' second year in college. And, perceived maternal drinking limits, but not general approval, assessed during students' second year predicted all three drinking outcomes during the students' third year. This study supports previous research showing the impact of parental permissiveness, especially drinking limits, on college drinking and highlights the role of race as a predictor of parental permissiveness. Moreover, our findings support general approval and drinking limits as distinct facets that reflect different dimensions of parental permissiveness.
父母对饮酒的放任是大学生饮酒行为的可靠预测指标,但对于预测这种放任态度的因素却知之甚少。本研究旨在探讨那些能够预测放任态度两个潜在不同方面的因素:对饮酒的普遍认可和感知到的饮酒限制。此外,我们还探究了这些方面如何在放任态度的预测因素与随后的大学生饮酒行为及相关后果之间起中介作用。来自美国三所大型大学的一年级学生(N = 1172)参与了一项为期三年的纵向研究(调查间隔约为1年)。学生们报告了人口统计学信息(即出生性别、种族、民族)、感知到的同伴禁令规范、饮酒结果(即饮酒高峰、重度饮酒及后果),以及感知到的母亲行为(即饮酒示范、监督、关于饮酒的交流)和对饮酒的态度(即普遍认可和饮酒限制)。结果表明,在大学二年级时,白人学生(与亚裔和黑人学生相比)感知到母亲对饮酒的普遍认可程度更高,且感知到母亲设定的饮酒限制也更高。而且,在大学二年级时评估的母亲设定的饮酒限制(而非普遍认可)能够预测学生在大学三年级时的所有三种饮酒结果。本研究支持了先前的研究,即父母的放任态度,尤其是饮酒限制,对大学生饮酒行为的影响,并突出了种族作为父母放任态度预测因素的作用。此外,我们的研究结果支持将普遍认可和饮酒限制视为反映父母放任态度不同维度的不同方面。