Literature DB >> 10513147

The intergenerational transmission of health-risk behaviors: adolescent lifestyles and gender moderating effects.

K A Wickrama1, R D Conger, L E Wallace, G H Elder.   

Abstract

The present longitudinal study of 330 adolescents used structural equation models to investigate whether (1) health-risk lifestyles exist among adults and adolescents, (2) parents' health-risk behaviors influence adolescents' health-risk behaviors, and (3) intergenerational transmission occurs by way of a health-risk lifestyle, by direct transmission of specific behaviors, or through both mechanisms. To address these questions, we estimated several models. The findings were generally supportive of the expectations. Results of single factor measurement models provided modest evidence for the existence of an underlying health-risk lifestyle factor among parents and adolescents. Results of structural equation models also demonstrated that parents' health-risk behaviors were transmitted to adolescents both at the lifestyle factor level and the unique component level. These associations prevailed even after controlling for family social status. However, parents' health-risk lifestyles mediated the effect of family social status on adolescents' lifestyles, net of the direct effect of family social status on adolescents' lifestyle. In these two-parent families, the effects of parents' health-risk lifestyles on adolescents seems to have gender symmetry. The findings of the separate models for boys and girls demonstrated that (1) fathers' health-risk lifestyle affected only boys' health-risk lifestyle, whereas (2) mother's health-risk lifestyle affected only girls' health-risk lifestyle. A similar gender moderating effect was not found for specific health-risk behaviors. Implications of these findings for future research and theoretical development are discussed.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10513147

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Soc Behav        ISSN: 0022-1465


  40 in total

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2.  Maternal drinking and risky sexual behavior in offspring.

Authors:  Natacha M De Genna; Marie D Cornelius
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3.  Explaining the Association between Early Adversity and Young Adults' Diabetes Outcomes: Physiological, Psychological, and Behavioral Mechanisms.

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Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2017-01-31

Review 4.  Ethnicity- and socio-economic status-related stresses in context: an integrative review and conceptual model.

Authors:  Hector F Myers
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  2008-11-07

5.  Linking family economic pressure and supportive parenting to adolescent health behaviors: two developmental pathways leading to health promoting and health risk behaviors.

Authors:  Josephine A Kwon; K A S Wickrama
Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2013-11-20

6.  Early socioeconomic adversity and young adult physical illness: the role of body mass index and depressive symptoms.

Authors:  K A S Wickrama; Josephine A Kwon; Assaf Oshri; Tae Kyoung Lee
Journal:  J Adolesc Health       Date:  2014-05-21       Impact factor: 5.012

7.  Intersecting Social Inequalities and Body Mass Index Trajectories from Adolescence to Early Adulthood.

Authors:  Taylor W Hargrove
Journal:  J Health Soc Behav       Date:  2018-01-04

8.  Socioeconomic gradients in health for white and Mexican-origin populations.

Authors:  Noreen Goldman; Rachel T Kimbro; Cassio M Turra; Anne R Pebley
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2006-10-31       Impact factor: 9.308

9.  Understanding the role of family dynamics, perceived norms, and lung cancer worry in predicting second-hand smoke avoidance among high-risk lung cancer families.

Authors:  Mark Manning; Mark Wojda; Lauren Hamel; Alicia Salkowski; Ann G Schwartz; Felicity Wk Harper
Journal:  J Health Psychol       Date:  2016-03-07

10.  Parental and adolescent health behaviors and pathways to adulthood.

Authors:  Shawn Bauldry; Michael J Shanahan; Ross Macmillan; Richard A Miech; Jason D Boardman; Danielle O Dean; Veronica Cole
Journal:  Soc Sci Res       Date:  2016-03-03
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