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Decreasing Substance use Risk among African American Youth: Parent-based Mechanisms of Change
Authors:Steven R. H. Beach  Allen W. Barton  Man Kit Lei  Jelani Mandara  Ashley C. Wells  Steven M. Kogan  Gene H. Brody
Affiliation:1.Center for Family Research,University of Georgia,Athens,USA;2.School of Education and Social Policy,Northwestern University,Evanston,USA;3.Center for Family Research and Department of Human Development and Family Science,University of Georgia,Athens,USA
Abstract:African American couples (N?=?139; 67.7 % married; with children between the ages of 9 and 14) were randomly assigned to (a) a culturally sensitive, couple- and parenting-focused program designed to prevent stress-spillover (n?=?70) or (b) an information-only control condition in which couples received self-help materials (n?=?69). Eight months after baseline, youth whose parents participated in the program, compared with control youth, reported increased parental monitoring, positive racial socialization, and positive self-concept, as well as decreased conduct problems and self-reported substance use. Changes in youth-reported parenting behavior partially mediated the effect of the intervention on conduct problems and fully mediated its impact on positive self-concept, but did not mediate effects on lifetime substance use initiation. Results suggest the potential for a culturally sensitive family-based intervention targeting adults’ couple and parenting processes to enhance multiple parenting behaviors as well as decrease youths’ substance use onset and vulnerability.
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