Literature DB >> 1449565

Acculturation and drinking patterns among U.S. Anglos, blacks, and Mexican Americans.

J A Neff1, S K Hoppe.   

Abstract

The relationship between acculturation, generational status/nativity and drinking patterns is examined using data from a 1988 community survey of 1286 adult regular drinkers (at least two drinks/month) in San Antonio, Texas. This sample includes 412 Anglo, 239 Black, and 635 Mexican American respondents, with Mexican Americans further classified into high, medium, and low acculturation groups using a language-use-based acculturation measure. This data set allows comparisons between racial/ethnic majority and minority groups with further comparisons between Black and Mexican American subgroups. These racial/ethnic and acculturation level comparisons highlight the effects of minority status and cultural differences between groups with regard to drinking patterns. Overall, the analyses indicate little evidence to support an 'acculturation stress' model of alcohol use, wherein the stresses of acculturation produce higher levels of alcohol consumption among moderately or higher acculturation groups. Generally, in our data, quantity and frequency consumption was somewhat higher among the least acculturated males and moderately acculturated females. Further analyses by generational status indicate heavier consumption patterns among second-generation individuals, especially among the less acculturated, though those differences were eliminated by controls. The findings highlight inadequacies of using generational status/nativity measures alone to assess acculturation level. Further, joint effects of acculturation level and generational status suggest the viability of a cultural marginality model of acculturation, though many of the effects of acculturation and generational status are explained by demographic and psychosocial factors.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1449565

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Alcohol Alcohol        ISSN: 0735-0414            Impact factor:   2.826


  9 in total

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Review 3.  Substance abuse prevalence and treatment among Latinos and Latinas.

Authors:  Josefina Alvarez; Leonard A Jason; Bradley D Olson; Joseph R Ferrari; Margaret I Davis
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4.  Problem drinking among Mexican-Americans: the influence of nativity and neighborhood context?

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5.  Influence of individual and social contextual factors on changes in leisure-time physical activity in working-class populations: results of the Healthy Directions-Small Businesses Study.

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6.  Factors associated with alcohol consumption patterns in a Puerto Rican urban cohort.

Authors:  Johanna Y Andrews-Chavez; Christina S Lee; Robert F Houser; Luis M Falcon; Katherine L Tucker
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7.  Associations between acculturation and alcohol consumption of Latino men in the United States.

Authors:  Katherine J Karriker-Jaffe; Sarah E Zemore
Journal:  J Stud Alcohol Drugs       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 2.582

8.  Social stressors and alcohol use among immigrant sexual and gender minority Latinos in a nontraditional settlement state.

Authors:  Paul A Gilbert; Krista Perreira; Eugenia Eng; Scott D Rhodes
Journal:  Subst Use Misuse       Date:  2014-04-07       Impact factor: 2.164

9.  The effect of blood alcohol level and preinjury chronic alcohol use on outcome from severe traumatic brain injury in Hispanics, anglo-Caucasians, and African-americans.

Authors:  Keira M OʼDell; H Julia Hannay; Fedora O Biney; Claudia S Robertson; T Siva Tian
Journal:  J Head Trauma Rehabil       Date:  2012 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.710

  9 in total

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