Melissa J Cox1, Susan T Ennett1, Vangie Foshee1, Andrea Hussong2, Melissa Lippold3, H Luz McNaughton-Reyes1. 1. a Department of Health Behavior , Gillings School of Global Public Health, UNC Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill , North Carolina , USA. 2. b Department of Psychology and Neuroscience , UNC Chapel Hill, Center for Developmental Science, UNC Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill , North Carolina , USA. 3. c School of Social Work, UNC Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill , North Carolina , USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although numerous studies have examined parental influence on adolescent alcohol misuse, few have examined how adolescents impact parental behavior or the reciprocal nature of parent-adolescent behavior relative to alcohol misuse. OBJECTIVES: This study assessed bidirectional relationships between adolescent alcohol misuse and three alcohol-specific parenting behaviors (substance-specific monitoring, permissive communication messages about alcohol, and cautionary communication messages about alcohol). METHODS: Data were from 1,645 parent-adolescent dyads drawn from a longitudinal study spanning grades 6-10. A multivariate latent curve model with structured residuals was used to test study hypotheses. RESULTS: One marginally significant result emerged (increased alcohol misuse leads to greater substance-specific monitoring) after accounting for underlying developmental processes. CONCLUSIONS: Though practical implications are limited based on the results of the study, further directions for research regarding study design and measurement are provided to more fully examine dynamic processes between parents and adolescents relative to alcohol use.
BACKGROUND: Although numerous studies have examined parental influence on adolescent alcohol misuse, few have examined how adolescents impact parental behavior or the reciprocal nature of parent-adolescent behavior relative to alcohol misuse. OBJECTIVES: This study assessed bidirectional relationships between adolescent alcohol misuse and three alcohol-specific parenting behaviors (substance-specific monitoring, permissive communication messages about alcohol, and cautionary communication messages about alcohol). METHODS: Data were from 1,645 parent-adolescent dyads drawn from a longitudinal study spanning grades 6-10. A multivariate latent curve model with structured residuals was used to test study hypotheses. RESULTS: One marginally significant result emerged (increased alcohol misuse leads to greater substance-specific monitoring) after accounting for underlying developmental processes. CONCLUSIONS: Though practical implications are limited based on the results of the study, further directions for research regarding study design and measurement are provided to more fully examine dynamic processes between parents and adolescents relative to alcohol use.
Entities:
Keywords:
Adolescent alcohol misuse; alcohol-specific parenting; socialization; structural equation modeling; transactional models of development
Authors: Susan T Ennett; Vangie A Foshee; Karl E Bauman; Andrea Hussong; Li Cai; Heathe Luz McNaughton Reyes; Robert Faris; John Hipp; Robert Durant Journal: Child Dev Date: 2008 Nov-Dec