Problematic familial alcohol use and adolescent outcomes: Do associations differ by parental education?

IF 1.9 3区 社会学 Q3 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Nordic Studies on Alcohol and Drugs Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-06-28 DOI:10.1177/14550725231157152
Joakim Wahlström, Charlotta Magnusson, Johan Svensson, Sara Brolin Låftman
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Aim: To investigate the associations between problematic familial alcohol use and adolescent subjective health, binge drinking, relationships with parents, school performance, and future orientation, and to study whether these associations differ in relation to parental education. Methods: Cross-sectional data from the Stockholm School Survey (SSS) collected among students in the 9th and 11th grades in 2018 and in 2020 were used (n = 19,415). Subjective health, parent-youth relationships, and school performance were coded as continuous variables; binge drinking and future orientation were coded as binary variables. Familial drinking included three categories: problematic; don't know/missing; and not problematic. Parental university education distinguished between adolescents with two, one, or no university-educated parent(s). Control variables included gender, grade, family structure, migration background, parental unemployment, and survey year. Linear and binary logistic regression analyses were performed. Results: Problematic familial alcohol use was associated with worsened subjective health, a higher likelihood of engaging in binge drinking, worse relationships with parents, and a higher likelihood of having a pessimistic future orientation, even when adjusting for all control variables. Having less than two university-educated parents was associated with a higher likelihood of reporting problematic familial alcohol use. Parental university education moderated the association between problematic familial alcohol use and binge drinking as this relationship was stronger for adolescents with no and one university-educated parent(s). Conclusions: Adolescents with problematic familial alcohol use fared worse with regards to all studied outcomes, except for school performance. Parental university education only moderated the association between problematic familial alcohol use and binge drinking. However, since problematic familial alcohol use was more common among adolescents with less than two university-educated parents, we argue that at the group level, this category may be more negatively affected by alcohol abuse in the family. Policy interventions could benefit from having a socioeconomic perspective on how children are affected by alcohol's harms to others.

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有问题的家庭饮酒与青少年结局:父母教育是否不同?
目的:调查有问题的家庭饮酒与青少年主观健康、酗酒、与父母的关系、学校表现和未来取向之间的关系,并研究这些关系是否与父母教育有关。方法:使用斯德哥尔摩学校调查(SSS)在2018年和2020年9年级和11年级学生中收集的横断面数据(n = 19415)。主观健康、父母与青少年的关系和学校表现被编码为连续变量;酗酒和未来取向被编码为二元变量。家庭饮酒包括三类:有问题的;不知道/失踪;并且没有问题。父母大学教育区分父母有两个、一个或没有受过大学教育的青少年。控制变量包括性别、年级、家庭结构、移民背景、父母失业率和调查年份。进行线性和二元逻辑回归分析。结果:有问题的家庭饮酒与主观健康状况恶化、酗酒的可能性更高、与父母的关系更差以及悲观未来取向的可能性更大有关,即使在调整了所有控制变量的情况下也是如此。父母不到两个受过大学教育的人报告家庭酗酒问题的可能性更高。父母大学教育调节了有问题的家庭饮酒与酗酒之间的关系,因为这种关系在没有受过大学教育的青少年中更为强烈。结论:除了学校表现外,有家庭酗酒问题的青少年在所有研究结果中的表现都更差。父母的大学教育只是缓和了有问题的家庭饮酒与酗酒之间的联系。然而,由于有问题的家庭饮酒在父母不到两个受过大学教育的青少年中更为常见,我们认为,在群体层面,这一类别可能会受到家庭酗酒的更负面影响。政策干预可以从社会经济角度了解儿童如何受到酒精对他人伤害的影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
11.80%
发文量
36
审稿时长
30 weeks
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