| Literature DB >> 29219033 |
Zachary T Gerdes1, Ronald F Levant1.
Abstract
The Conformity to Masculine Norms Inventory (CMNI) is a widely used multidimensional scale. Studies using the CMNI most often report only total scale scores, which are predominantly associated with negative outcomes. Various studies since the CMNI's inception in 2003 using subscales have reported both positive and negative outcomes. The current content analysis examined studies ( N = 17) correlating the 11 subscales with 63 criterion variables across 7 categories. Most findings were consistent with past research using total scale scores that reported negative outcomes. For example, conformity to masculine norms has been inversely related to help-seeking and positively correlated with concerning health variables, such as substance use. Nonetheless, past reliance on total scores has obscured the complexity of associations with the CMNI in that 30% of the findings in the present study reflected positive outcomes, particularly for health promotion. Subscales differed in their relationships with various outcomes: for one subscale they were predominantly positive, but six others were mostly negative. The situational and contextual implications of conformity to masculine norms and their relationships to positive and negative outcomes are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Conformity to Masculine Norms Inventory (CMNI) subscales; masculine norms; men’s health and well-being
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29219033 PMCID: PMC5818131 DOI: 10.1177/1557988317745910
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Mens Health ISSN: 1557-9883
Studies Using the Subscales of the Conformity to Masculine Norms Inventory.
| Author(s) (publication year) | Sample | Variable(s) used | |
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| New England prisoners and detainees | 1,600 (men) | Prison inmate violence |
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| Self-identified heterosexual women | 183 (women) | Feminist identity—revelation |
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| Men with spinal cord injury | 116 | Erectile functioning |
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| College men and women | 170 (men) | Relationship satisfaction |
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| Community men | 250 | Courage |
| Grit | |||
| Personal control | |||
| Autonomy | |||
| Endurance | |||
| Resilience | |||
| Self-esteem | |||
| Life satisfaction | |||
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| College men | 164 | Internal motivation to know |
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| College men identified as “completely heterosexual” | 104 | Attitudes toward gay men |
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| College men (2011) | 323 | Avoidance of anger/stress |
| Avoidance of substance use | |||
| Proper use of health care resources | |||
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| Male nurses | 98 | Alcohol consumption |
| Medical ailments | |||
| Self-perceived poor health | |||
| Medicine consumption | |||
| Doctor visits | |||
| Work satisfaction | |||
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| Asian American men from the community | 154 | Alcohol use |
| Binge drinking | |||
| Marijuana use | |||
| Cocaine use | |||
| Other substance use | |||
| Peer substance use | |||
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| College men | 254 | Sexually aggressive behavior |
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| Australian men | 253 | Health promoting behavior |
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| College men | 153 | Talk to partner (response to depression) |
| Talk to mental health professional (response to depression) | |||
| Exercise or workout (response to depression) | |||
| Have a few drinks (response to depression) | |||
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| College men from Madrid, Spain | 226 | Alcohol consumption |
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| Male spinal cord injury patients | 20 | Satisfaction with life |
| Functional independence | |||
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| Italian male college students in Italy | 152 | Self-acceptance |
| Positive relations with others | |||
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| College men | 154 | Religious commitment |
| Religious fundamentalism | |||
| Intrinsic religious orientation | |||
| Extrinsic religious orientation |
Male Participants’ Correlates of Conformity to Masculine Norms With Criterion Variables.
| CMNI subscale findings | Winning | Emotional Control | Risk-Taking | Violence | Power Over Women | Dominance | Playboy | Self-Reliance | Primacy of Work | Disdain for Homosexuals | Pursuit of Status | Total findings |
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| Alcohol use[ | .20 | −.20 | .17 | .17 | .20 | .29 | ||||||
| Binge drinking[ | .19 | −.18 | .29 | .23 | ||||||||
| Alcohol use[ | .28 | .16 | .26 | .29 | .33 | .26 | .41 | .27 | .23 | .25 | ||
| Alcohol consumption[ | .13 | .20 | ||||||||||
| Alcohol consumption (nurses)[ | .21 | .32 | .23 | |||||||||
| Cigarette use[ | −.15 | |||||||||||
| Marijuana use[ | .18 | .17 | ||||||||||
| Cocaine use[ | .18 | |||||||||||
| Other substance use[ | .19 | |||||||||||
| Peer substance use[ | −.19 | .37 | .21 | −.24 | .23 | |||||||
| Avoidance of substance use[ | .21 | −.25 | ||||||||||
| Have a few drinks (response to depression)[ | .21 | .30 | .22 | .32 | ||||||||
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| Medical ailments (nurses)[ | −.27 | |||||||||||
| Self-perceived poor health (nurses)[ | −.30 | |||||||||||
| Functional independence (spinal cord injury patients)[ | .57 | .54 | ||||||||||
| Avoidance of anger/stress[ | .18 | −.22 | .14 | |||||||||
| Preventative self-care[ | .12 | |||||||||||
| Proper use of health-care resources[ | −.13 | −.17 | ||||||||||
| Athletic involvement[ | .27 | |||||||||||
| Erectile functioning[ | .23 | |||||||||||
| Medicine consumption (nurses)[ | −.20 | |||||||||||
| Doctor visits (nurses)[ | −.20 | .24 | −.20 | |||||||||
| Age[ | −.28 | −.28 | ||||||||||
| Depression[ | .27 | .43 | ||||||||||
| Talk to mental health professional (response to depression)[ | −.22 | −.20 | −.19 | |||||||||
| Exercise or workout (response to depression)[ | .34 | .27 | .19 | .21 | ||||||||
| Health promoting behavior[ | .16 | .15 | .22 | .26 | .21 | .16 | .29 | .24 | ||||
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| Religious commitment[ | −.31 | −.24 | −.36 | .26 | ||||||||
| Religious fundamentalism[ | .28 | −.24 | .46 | |||||||||
| Religious fundamentalism[ | .28 | |||||||||||
| Intrinsic religious orientation[ | −.32 | −.29 | .36 | |||||||||
| Extrinsic religious orientation[ | .22 | .26 | ||||||||||
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| Internal motivation to know[ | −.22 | −.23 | −.15 | −.31 | .31 | |||||||
| Intrinsic motivation to accomplish[ | −.15 | −.19 | −.18 | −.20 | −.26 | .37 | ||||||
| Intrinsic motivation to experience stimulation[ | −.17 | −.23 | −.24 | −.19 | .34 | |||||||
| External motivation introjected[ | −.20 | .21 | −.27 | .20 | ||||||||
| Extrinsic Motivation external[ | .32 | |||||||||||
| External motivation identified[ | −.20 | .21 | −.15 | −.16 | .19 | |||||||
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| Feminist identity-revelation[ | −.29 | −.20 | −.24 | −.19 | ||||||||
| Feminist identity-synthesis[ | −.23 | −.22 | −.37 | −.27 | −.27 | −.19 | .19 | |||||
| Feminist identity-active commitment[ | −.32 | −.28 | −.49 | −.25 | −.19 | −.36 | −.15 | −.19 | ||||
| Feminist identity-passive acceptance[ | .24 | .23 | −.18 | .46 | .28 | .23 | .36 | |||||
| Feminist identity-embeddedness[ | −.19 | −.16 | −.23 | −.21 | −.19 | |||||||
| Attitudes toward gay men[ | .34 | .44 | ||||||||||
| Attitudes toward lesbian women[ | −.29 | −.21 | −.29 | −.21 | .34 | |||||||
| Rape myth acceptance[ | .16 | .16 | .20 | .41 | .28 | .26 | .14 | .13 | .33 | |||
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| Courage[ | −.16 | .32 | .14 | .15 | −.15 | .17 | ||||||
| Grit[ | −.14 | −.18 | ||||||||||
| Personal control[ | −.14 | −.21 | −.28 | |||||||||
| Autonomy[ | −.17 | −.15 | −.25 | |||||||||
| Endurance[ | .17 | .22 | ||||||||||
| Resilience[ | −.26 | .19 | −.26 | .18 | ||||||||
| Self-esteem[ | −.27 | −.30 | .15 | |||||||||
| Life satisfaction[ | .19 | −.17 | ||||||||||
| Satisfaction with life (spinal cord injury patients)[ | .52 | |||||||||||
| Self-acceptance[ | .20 | −.17 | .18 | |||||||||
| Work satisfaction (nurses)[ | −.24 | −.23 | ||||||||||
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| Positive relations with others[ | −.46 | −.32 | ||||||||||
| Relationship satisfaction[ | −.40 | |||||||||||
| Prison inmate violence[ | .36 | .25 | .43 | .55 | .29 | .36 | .36 | .40 | .29 | .21 | ||
| Sexually aggressive behavior[ | .20 | .27 | .17 | .33 | .24 | .37 | .15 | .21 | ||||
| Social support[ | −.32 | −.39 | ||||||||||
| Talk to partner (response to depression)[ | −.25 | −.27 | −.18 | −.19 | ||||||||
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| Total findings per subscale | 18 | 31 | 14 | 23 | 16 | 17 | 27 | 29 | 12 | 19 | 13 | 219 |
| Findings of negative outcomes | 9 | 24 | 7 | 17 | 13 | 11 | 25 | 25 | 3 | 10 | 8 | 153 |
| Findings of positive outcomes | 8 | 7 | 7 | 6 | 3 | 6 | 2 | 4 | 9 | 9 | 5 | 66 |
| Other (motivation variables) | 1 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 18 |
Note. 1Amato (2012). 2Backus and Mahalik (2011). 3Burns et al. (2010). 4Burn and Ward (2005). 5Hammer and Good (2010). 6Kahn et al. (2011). 7Keiller (2010). 8Levant et al. (2011). 9Limiñana-Gras et al. (2013). 10Liu and Iwamoto (2007). 11Locke and Mahalik (2005). 12Mahalik et al. (2007). 13Mahalik and Rochlen (2006). 14Sánchez-López et al. (2012). 15Schopp et al. (2007). 16Tager and Good (2005). 17Ward and Cook (2011).
p < .05. **p < .01. ***p < .001.