Individual traits and family contexts predict sons’ externalizing behavior and preliminary relative risk ratios for conduct disorder and substance use disorder outcomes

An ontogenetic framework for elucidating the etiology of substance use disorders (SUD) requires identifying how individual traits and family contexts combine to increase risk for SUD outcomes. In this study, we examine individual traits in family context to identify processes that account for the re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Drug and alcohol dependence 1999-09, Vol.56 (2), p.115-131
Hauptverfasser: Blackson, Timothy C, Butler, Therese, Belsky, Jay, Ammerman, Robert T, Shaw, Daniel S, Tarter, Ralph E
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container_end_page 131
container_issue 2
container_start_page 115
container_title Drug and alcohol dependence
container_volume 56
creator Blackson, Timothy C
Butler, Therese
Belsky, Jay
Ammerman, Robert T
Shaw, Daniel S
Tarter, Ralph E
description An ontogenetic framework for elucidating the etiology of substance use disorders (SUD) requires identifying how individual traits and family contexts combine to increase risk for SUD outcomes. In this study, we examine individual traits in family context to identify processes that account for the relationship between fathers’ SUD+ status and sons’ externalizing behaviors. Results obtained from SUD+ ( n=89) and SUD− ( n=139) families show that fathers’ abusive propensities toward their sons mediated the relationship between fathers’ SUD+ status and sons’ externalizing behavior scale (EBS) scores 2 years later. Moreover, individual traits, family contextual variables and deviant peer affiliations accounted for 58% of the variance on sons’ EBS scores. Also, high risk cluster (HRC) and low risk cluster (LRC) memberships were derived from cluster analyses of the continuous risk factor scores that predicted sons’ EBS scores. Preliminary relative risk ratios show that sons classified into the HRC at age 10–12 were at greater risk for DSM-III-R conduct disorder and SUD outcomes at age 16 than sons assigned to the LRC, SUD+ or SUD− groups. Implications for selected family-based prevention initiatives are presented.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0376-8716(99)00030-7
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Adolescent
Behavior problems
Behavioural problems
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Child Behavior - psychology
Conduct Disorder - genetics
Conduct Disorder - psychology
Conduct disorders
Etiology
Familial factors
Family
Family environment. Family history
Fathers - psychology
Female
Humans
Male
Marriage - psychology
Medical sciences
Nuclear Family - psychology
Parent-Child Relations
Peer Group
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Risk
Social psychiatry. Ethnopsychiatry
Socioeconomic Factors
Substance abuse
Substance abuse disorders
Substance-Related Disorders - genetics
Substance-Related Disorders - psychology
Traits
title Individual traits and family contexts predict sons’ externalizing behavior and preliminary relative risk ratios for conduct disorder and substance use disorder outcomes
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