Time-varying effects of families and peers on adolescent marijuana use: Person–environment interactions across development

Studies have demonstrated that the effects of two well-known predictors of adolescent substance use, family monitoring and antisocial peers, are not static but change over the course of adolescence. Moreover, these effects may differ for different groups of youth. The current study uses time-varying...

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Veröffentlicht in:Development and psychopathology 2017-08, Vol.29 (3), p.887-900
Hauptverfasser: Epstein, Marina, Hill, Karl G., Roe, Stephanie S., Bailey, Jennifer A., Iacono, William G., McGue, Matt, Kristman-Valente, Allison, Catalano, Richard F., Haggerty, Kevin P.
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container_end_page 900
container_issue 3
container_start_page 887
container_title Development and psychopathology
container_volume 29
creator Epstein, Marina
Hill, Karl G.
Roe, Stephanie S.
Bailey, Jennifer A.
Iacono, William G.
McGue, Matt
Kristman-Valente, Allison
Catalano, Richard F.
Haggerty, Kevin P.
description Studies have demonstrated that the effects of two well-known predictors of adolescent substance use, family monitoring and antisocial peers, are not static but change over the course of adolescence. Moreover, these effects may differ for different groups of youth. The current study uses time-varying effect modeling to examine the changes in the association between family monitoring and antisocial peers and marijuana use from ages 11 to 19, and to compare these associations by gender and levels of behavioral disinhibition. Data are drawn from the Raising Healthy Children study, a longitudinal panel of 1,040 youth. The strength of association between family monitoring and antisocial peers and marijuana use was mostly steady over adolescence, and was greater for girls than for boys. Differences in the strength of the association were also evident by levels of behavioral disinhibition: youth with lower levels of disinhibition were more susceptible to the influence of parents and peers. Stronger influence of family monitoring on girls and less disinhibited youth was most evident in middle adolescence, whereas the stronger effect of antisocial peers was significant during middle and late adolescence. Implications for the timing and targeting of marijuana preventive interventions are discussed.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S0954579416000559
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source Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Addictive behaviors
Adolescents
Adults
Antisocial personality disorder
Behavior
Cannabis
Child development
Children
Drug abuse
Drug use
Families & family life
Gender
Health services
Impulsivity
Influence
Marijuana
Mental health
Parents & parenting
Peer relationships
Peers
Psychopathology
Regular Articles
Social behavior
Social change
Substance use
Teenagers
title Time-varying effects of families and peers on adolescent marijuana use: Person–environment interactions across development
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