Publication | Closed Access
The role of life events, family support, and competence in adolescent substance use: A test of vulnerability and protective factors
375
Citations
66
References
1992
Year
Family SupportSubstance UseFamily InvolvementAdolescent Behavioral HealthEducationAdolescent Substance UseMental HealthAdolescencePsychologyAlcohol MisuseFamily InteractionHigher LevelNegative AffectFamily LifePublic HealthPrimary PreventionAdolescent PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentChild DevelopmentSubstance AbuseLife EventsAddictionSociologySubstance AddictionMedicineFamily Dynamic
Tested propositions from a model of vulnerability and protective factors with a multiethnic sample of 1,289 urban adolescents, aged 11-13 years. The criterion variable was a composite score for cigarette, alcohol, and marijuana use. Multiple regression analyses indicated that vulnerability factors (negative life events, negative affect) were related to a higher level of substance use, and protective factors (parent emotional and instrumental support, academic and adult competence, positive affect) were related to a lower level of substance use; peer competence was positively related to substance use in a multivariate model. There was a significant overall interaction of Vulnerability x Protective Factors, consistent with a stress-buffering effect. Individual interactions for Life Events x Family Support, Life Events x Competence, and Negative x Positive Affect also were consistent with buffering effects. Implications for theories of substance use and primary prevention are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1