1. Mexican Adolescents' Alcohol Use, Family Intimacy, and Parent-Adolescent Communication
- Author
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Yan Zhou, Brenda L. Eakin, Esther Carlota Gallegos Cabriales, Carol Loveland-Cherry, Antonia M. Villarruel, David L. Ronis, and Kristy K. Martyn
- Subjects
Male ,Adolescent ,Alcohol Drinking ,Urban Population ,Cross-sectional study ,Binge drinking ,Alcohol ,Adolescent risk ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Family relations ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,Mexico ,Community and Home Care ,Mexican adolescents ,Communication ,Adolescent alcohol ,Health Surveys ,Family nursing ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Logistic Models ,chemistry ,Adolescent Behavior ,Female ,Family Relations ,Family Practice ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Despite widespread adolescent alcohol use, research on individual and contextual factors among Mexican adolescents is limited. This study describes the relationship between adolescent risk/protective factors, parent-adolescent communication, and their effects on alcohol use of 14- to 17-year-old adolescents living in Mexico ( N = 829; 458 girls, 371 boys). In this study, adolescents reported that 55% ever used alcohol, 24% used alcohol in the past 30 days, and 10% reported binge drinking. Adolescents with high family intimacy were less likely to report ever using alcohol and binge drinking. Regression analysis revealed that parent-adolescent communication mediated the effect of family intimacy on overall and binge drinking. Alcohol use prevention with Mexican adolescents should focus on family intimacy and parent-adolescent communication.
- Published
- 2009
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