Conceptualizing protective family context and its effect on substance use: Comparisons across diverse ethnic-racial youth

Background: Although family behaviors are known to be important for buffering youth against substance use, research in this area often evaluates a particular type of family interaction and how it shapes adolescents' behaviors, when it is likely that youth experience the co-occurrence of multipl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Substance abuse 2021, Vol.42 (4), p.796-805
Hauptverfasser: Constante, Kevin, Huntley, Edward D., Si, Yajuan, Schillinger, Emma, Wagner, Christine, Keating, Daniel P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: Although family behaviors are known to be important for buffering youth against substance use, research in this area often evaluates a particular type of family interaction and how it shapes adolescents' behaviors, when it is likely that youth experience the co-occurrence of multiple types of family behaviors that may be protective. Methods: The current study (N = 1716, 10th and 12th graders, 55% female) examined associations between protective family context, a latent variable comprised of five different measures of family behaviors, and past 12 months substance use: alcohol, cigarettes, marijuana, and e-cigarettes. Results: A multi-group measurement invariance assessment supported protective family context as a coherent latent construct with partial (metric) measurement invariance among Black, Latinx, and White youth. A multi-group path model indicated that protective family context was significantly associated with less substance use for all youth, but of varying magnitudes across ethnic-racial groups. Conclusion: These results emphasize the importance of evaluating psychometric properties of family-relevant latent variables on the basis of group membership in order to draw appropriate inferences on how such family variables relate to substance use among diverse samples.
ISSN:0889-7077
1547-0164
DOI:10.1080/08897077.2020.1856289