Risk and Protective Processes Predicting Rural African American Young Men's Substance Abuse

Informed by a life course perspective, this study tested a cascade model linking harsh, unresponsive parenting during childhood to young African American men's substance abuse via precocious transitions, economic instability, and future orientation. The moderating influence of community disadva...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of community psychology 2016-12, Vol.58 (3-4), p.422-433
Hauptverfasser: Cho, Junhan, Kogan, Steven M.
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container_title American journal of community psychology
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creator Cho, Junhan
Kogan, Steven M.
description Informed by a life course perspective, this study tested a cascade model linking harsh, unresponsive parenting during childhood to young African American men's substance abuse via precocious transitions, economic instability, and future orientation. The moderating influence of community disadvantage and romantic partner support on the hypothesized pathways was also examined. At the baseline, the sample included 505 African American men between ages 19 and 22 years from high‐poverty rural communities. Follow‐up data were collected 18 months after baseline. Using structural equation modeling, we identified harsh, unresponsive parenting influenced precocious transitions in adolescence, which in turn increased economic instability during young adulthood. Economic instability was associated with a reduction in future orientation, a proximal influence on increases in substance abuse. Also, residence in a disadvantaged community amplified the influence of precocious transitions on economic instability and the influence of economic instability on future orientation. Involvement with supportive romantic partnership evinced a protective effect, attenuating the influence of precocious transitions on economic instability and the influence of economic instability on a future orientation. This study expands understanding of young adults’ substance abuse by demonstrating the risk and protective processes linking substance abuse to developmental factors across childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/ajcp.12104
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The moderating influence of community disadvantage and romantic partner support on the hypothesized pathways was also examined. At the baseline, the sample included 505 African American men between ages 19 and 22 years from high‐poverty rural communities. Follow‐up data were collected 18 months after baseline. Using structural equation modeling, we identified harsh, unresponsive parenting influenced precocious transitions in adolescence, which in turn increased economic instability during young adulthood. Economic instability was associated with a reduction in future orientation, a proximal influence on increases in substance abuse. Also, residence in a disadvantaged community amplified the influence of precocious transitions on economic instability and the influence of economic instability on future orientation. 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subjects Adolescents
African American
African Americans
African Americans - psychology
African Americans - statistics & numerical data
Child
Child Abuse - psychology
Childhood
Childrearing practices
Community disadvantage
Disadvantaged
Drug abuse
Economic instability
Humans
Influence
Male
Men
Michigan
Parenting - psychology
Parents & parenting
Poverty Areas
Precocious transition
Protective Factors
Residence
Risk Factors
Romantic partnerships
Romantic relationships
Rural communities
Rural Population
Rural poverty
Socioeconomic Factors
Statistics as Topic
Structural equation modeling
Substance abuse
Substance-Related Disorders - epidemiology
Substance-Related Disorders - ethnology
Substance-Related Disorders - prevention & control
Substance-Related Disorders - psychology
Transitions
Young Adult
Young adults
title Risk and Protective Processes Predicting Rural African American Young Men's Substance Abuse
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