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Nuova numerazione 83263
Collocazione UPS BIBL CENTR 39-B-921
Autore ROBILLARD, C. L.
Titolo A Two-Way Street? : reciprocal Associations Between Parental Warmth and Hostility with Substance Use Among Justice-Involved Adolescents. Parte componente di periodico
Descrizione fisica pp. 1442-1456.
Nota generale Estratto da: Journal of Youth and Adolescence 2022, 51, 7.
Riassunto Transactional developmental theories propose that poor parenting behaviors contribute to youth substance use, and youth substance use contributes to poor parenting behaviors. However, research aimed at testing these theories has not distinguished: (1) between- and within-person sources of variance; (2) maternal and paternal parenting behaviors; and (3) alcohol, marijuana, and other illicit drug use. This study addressed these limitations by investigating the reciprocal associations between maternal and paternal warmth and hostility with alcohol, marijuana, and other illicit drug use among justice-involved adolescents, an at-risk population for substance use. 1354 justice-involved adolescents (86.4% male; Mage = 16.04 [SD = 0.14], range = 14–17; 41.4% Black, 33.5% Hispanic, 20.2% White, 4.8% other race/ethnicity) completed self-reports assessing parental warmth, parental hostility, and substance use every six months for 36 months. Random-intercept structural equation models disaggregated between- and within-person associations. At the between-person level, maternal and paternal warmth were negatively associated with alcohol, marijuana, and other illicit drug use, whereas maternal and paternal hostility were positively associated with alcohol, marijuana, and other illicit drug use. At the within-person level, maternal and paternal warmth predicted decreases in marijuana and other illicit drug use, and paternal warmth predicted decreases in alcohol use six months later. Maternal hostility predicted increases in subsequent marijuana and other illicit drug use. Marijuana and other illicit drug use predicted decreases in subsequent paternal hostility. The results are partially consistent with transactional developmental models proposing recursive influences between parenting behaviors and youth substance use. Evocative effects were in the opposite direction than expected and specific to fathers, such that youth drug use was related to improvements in the father-youth relationship. The results support the potential utility of family-based interventions for substance use among justice-involved adolescents.
Tipo di documento RICERCA.
Soggetto TRANSIZIONE.
GENITORI.
CONSUMI.
DROGA.
ADOLESCENTI.
GIUSTIZIA.
RISCHIO.
ALCOOL.
Ambito Psicologico
Sociologico
Autore Secondario BALAKRISHNAN, C.
CRAIG, S. G.
TURNER, B. J.
Titolo correlato Journal of Youth and Adolescence 2022, 51, 7.
Accesso online Accesso diretto all'articolo
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