Asian American journal of psychology | 2019

Parental Support, Parent-Adolescent Conflict, and Substance Use of Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander Youth: Ethnic Differences in Stress-Buffering and Vulnerability Effects.

 
 
 
 

Abstract


This research study examined the overall and ethnic-specific effects of parental emotional and instrumental support, parent-adolescent interpersonal conflict, and negative life events (i.e., major life stressors, such as parental job loss or school suspension) on the substance use of Caucasian, Asian-American, Filipino, and Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander (NHOPI) youth in Hawai i. Adolescents (N = 3,561) from 10 public middle/intermediate schools completed paper/pencil surveys, and multiple regression and structural equation models were developed to examine overall and ethnic-specific effects. Parental support was found to buffer against the influence of negative life events on substance use in the overall sample; however, this effect was not observed for either Caucasian or NHOPI youth in ethnic-specific analyses. The impact of parent-adolescent conflict and negative life events on substance use was more pronounced for both Filipino and NHOPI youth. While the study may have had some limitations related to regional specificity and measurement, the findings nonetheless point to the differential effects of risk and protective factors for NHOPI youth, compared with other youth ethnic groups in Hawai i. Implications of these findings for culturally specific, family-focused prevention research and practice for NHOPI youth are discussed.

Volume 10 3
Pages \n 218-226\n
DOI 10.1037/aap0000139
Language English
Journal Asian American journal of psychology

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