| Literature DB >> 26301514 |
Miguel Ángel Cano1, Seth J Schwartz2, Linda G Castillo3, Jennifer B Unger4, Shi Huang2, Byron L Zamboanga5, Andrea J Romero6, Elma I Lorenzo-Blanco7, David Córdova8, Sabrina E Des Rosiers9, Karina M Lizzi2, Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati10, Daniel W Soto11, Juan Andres Villamar12, Monica Pattarroyo11, José Szapocznik2.
Abstract
Drawing from a theory of bicultural family functioning 2 models were tested to examine the longitudinal effects of acculturation-related variables on adolescent health risk behaviors and depressive symptoms (HRB/DS) mediated by caregiver and adolescent reports of family functioning. One model examined the effects of caregiver-adolescent acculturation discrepancies in relation to family functioning and HRB/DS. A second model examined the individual effects of caregiver and adolescent acculturation components in relation to family functioning and HRB/DS. A sample of 302 recently immigrated Hispanic caregiver-child dyads completed measures of Hispanic and U.S. cultural practices, values, and identities at baseline (predictors); measures of family cohesion, family communications, and family involvement 6 months postbaseline (mediators); and only adolescents completed measures of smoking, binge drinking, inconsistent condom use, and depressive symptoms 1 year postbaseline (outcomes). Measures of family cohesion, family communications, and family involvement were used to conduct a confirmatory factor analysis to estimate the fit of a latent construct for family functioning. Key findings indicate that (a) adolescent acculturation components drove the effect of caregiver-adolescent acculturation discrepancies in relation to family functioning; (b) higher levels of adolescent family functioning were associated with less HRB/DS, whereas higher levels of caregiver family functioning were associated with more adolescent HRB/DS; (c) and only adolescent reports of family functioning mediated the effects of acculturation components and caregiver-adolescent acculturation discrepancies on HRB/DS. (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26301514 PMCID: PMC4766064 DOI: 10.1037/fam0000142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fam Psychol ISSN: 0893-3200