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Individualism-Collectivism,Social Self-Control and Adolescent Substance Use and Risky Sexual Behavior
Authors:Pallav Pokhrel  Brooke L. Bennett  Sakshi Regmi  Bulat Idrisov  Artur Galimov  Leila Akhmadeeva
Affiliation:1. Cancer Prevention and Control Program, University of Hawaii Cancer Center, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA;2. School of Public Health &3. Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA;4. Bashkir State Medical University, Ufa, Russia;5. Boston University Medical Center, Boston, USA;6. Institute for Health Promotion &7. Disease Prevention Research, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA
Abstract:Individualism and collectivism are cultural syndromes that have been associated with adolescent problem behavior in studies conducted in the U.S. and Southeast Asia. However, research investigating the mechanisms of how cultural orientation impacts health risk behaviors has been limited. This study tested a new model explaining the relationship between cultural orientation (i.e., individualism, collectivism) and adolescent problem behavior (i.e., substance use and risky sex) in terms of interpersonal self-regulation (i.e., social self-control). As such, the study is rooted in theories of the role of culture in developing self-regulation. Participants were high school students (N = 716) from the Bashkirtostan Republic of the Russian Federation. Adolescents from the Russian Federation tend to show high prevalence of cigarette smoking and binge drinking. People of the Russian Federation in general are traditionally collectivist in orientation, although increased globalization and post-Soviet capitalism may indicate high individualist values in younger generation Russians. Using path analysis we found that in addition to having direct effects, higher individualism indirectly affected substance use and risky sexual behavior through social self-control and negative life events. Higher collectivism was found to have a direct protective effect on risky sexual behavior and a direct effect on social self-control. However, collectivism was not found to have indirect effects on substance use or risky sexual behavior. Higher individualism appears to function as a risk factor for adolescent problem behavior and this relationship may be mediated by lower social self-control. Culturally-tailored prevention programs utilizing the individualism-collectivism framework may benefit from addressing social self-control.
Keywords:Social self-control  individualism  collectivism  substance use  risky sex
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