Participants Data corresponding to 660 young adults (50% female) who are participants in a larger ongoing longitudinal study of familial alcoholism were.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism National Institutes of Health Department of Health and Human Services.
Advertisements

The Link Between Low Socioeconomic Status and Psychopathology.
Martha Early, MA, Micah Mazurek, PhD Thompson Center for Autism and Neurodevelopmental Disabilities, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO INTRODUCTION.
Interparental Conflict & Children’s Internalizing Psychopathology: Examining the Role of Children’s Appraisals & Emotions Jennifer K. Hauser & John H.
Associations Among Adolescent Conduct Problems and Perceived Peer and Parental Acceptance of Adolescent Alcohol Use Julia D. Grant, Kathleen K. Bucholz,
The Watson Institute Adolescents with autism spectrum disorders are at greater risk for developing depression when compared to children without an autism.
Developing and validating a stress appraisal measure for minority adolescents Journal of Adolescence 28 (2005) 547–557 Impact Factor: A.A. Rowley.
Is Psychosocial Stress Associated with Alcohol Use Among Continuation High School Students? Raul Calderon, Jr. Ph.D., Gregory T. Smith, Ph.D., Marilyn.
Taking the Edge Off: Exploring the Role of Stress in Drinking Across the Life Course Background and Aims Major Findings Methods Results Implications Paul.
The Influence of Parent Education on Child Outcomes: The Mediating Role of Parents Beliefs and Behaviors Pamela E. Davis-Kean University of Michigan This.
Long-term Outcomes of an Interdisciplinary Weight Management Clinic for Youth with Special Needs Meredith Dreyer Gillette PhD 1, 2, Cathleen Odar Stough.
The Discrepancy-Depression Association: Gender and Grade Differences Erin N. Stevens, M. C. Lovejoy, & Laura D. Pittman Northern Illinois University Introduction:
Social Anxiety and Depression Comorbidity Influences on Positive Alcohol Expectancies Amy K. Bacon, Hilary G. Casner, & Lindsay S. Ham University of Arkansas.
PERSONALITY DISORDER SYMPTOMS AND DRINKING MOTIVES AS PREDICTORS OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION AND CONSEQUENCES. Sarah L. Tragesser, Aesoon Park, Kenneth J. Sher,
Candidate Gene Studies in Substance-Dependent Adolescents, their Siblings, and Controls S. E. Young, A. Smolen, M. C. Stallings, R. P. Corley, T. J. Crowley.
POSTER TEMPLATE BY: om Sex Differences in Associations between Fear of Negative Evaluation (FNE) and Substance Use Lesley A.
Acknowledgments: Data for this study were collected as part of the CIHR Team: GO4KIDDS: Great Outcomes for Kids Impacted by Severe Developmental Disabilities.
® From Bad to Worse: Comorbidities and Chronic Lower Back Pain Margaret Cecere JD, Richard Young MD, Sandra Burge PhD The University of Texas Health Science.
An Examination of Paternal Contributions to Child Behavior Among a Low-Income and Ethnically Diverse Sample Michael P. Flores, Kyle W. Murdock, & Laura.
Adolescent Romantic Relationships and Depressive Symptoms: The Moderating Effect of Emotional Intelligence Introduction David E. Szwedo
Disentangling the Relations between Discrimination, Cultural Orientation, Social Support, and Coping in Mexican American Adolescents Megan O’Donnell Mark.
Purpose The present study examined the psychometric properties of the SCARED in order to begin establishing an evidence base for using the SCARED in pediatric.
Ethnic Identity among Mexican American Adolescents: The Role of Maternal Cultural Values and Parenting Practices 1 Miriam M. Martinez, 1 Gustavo Carlo,
Maternal Romantic Relationship Quality, Parenting Stress and Child Outcomes: A Mediational Model Christine R. Keeports, Nicole J. Holmberg, & Laura D.
APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY LABORATORY East Tennessee State University Johnson City, Tennessee INTRODUCTION CONTACT:
CHILDHOOD MALTREATMENT AND ADOLESCENT ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR: Romantic Relationship Quality as Moderator Susaye S. Rattigan, M.A. & Manfred H.M. van Dulmen,
◦ 125 adolescents (56% girls; 75% Caucasian) and their mothers from the Adolescent Adjustment Project (AAP) ◦ Adolescents’ mean age = (SD=.70) ◦
® Introduction Changes in Opioid Use for Chronic Low Back Pain: One-Year Followup Roy X. Luo, Tamara Armstrong, PsyD, Sandra K. Burge, PhD The University.
The Broader Context of Relational Aggression in Adolescent Romantic Relationships Megan M. Schad, David E. Szwedo, Amanda Hare, Jill Antonishak, Joseph.
Table 2: Correlation between age and readiness to change Table 1: T-test relating gender and readiness to change  It is estimated that 25% of children.
Introduction Introduction Alcohol Abuse Characteristics Results and Conclusions Results and Conclusions Analyses comparing primary substance of abuse indicated.
Positive and Negative Affect and Health in Lung Cancer Patients Jameson K. Hirsch, Ph.D. 1,2, H. Mason 1, & Paul R. Duberstein, Ph.D. 2 Department of Psychology,
Expecting the worst often leads to poor outcomes. This process is particularly true in close relationships, as those who are most sensitive to rejection.
Presented at the UCI Undergraduate Research Symposium by Rebecca Christensen May 15, 2004 Social Support and Foster-Care Children’s Adjustment: A Comparison.
The Overall Effect of Childhood Feeding Problems on Caregiver’s Quality of Life Amy J. Majewski 1, W. Hobart Davies 1, & Alan H. Silverman 2 University.
Introduction Disordered eating continues to be a significant health concern for college women. Recent research shows it is on the rise among men. Media.
METHODS Sample: The Institute for Survey Research of Temple University conducted face-to-face interviews for the 1995 National Alcohol Survey (NAS). The.
The current study examined whether mothers’ enculturation characteristics were associated with increases in adolescents’ ethnic identity exploration and.
Youth violence exposure, adolescent delinquency and anxiety, and the potential mediating role of sleep problems during middle childhood Chelsea M. Weaver.
PERSONALITY AND DRINKING MOTIVES AS MECHANISMS OF FAMILIAL TRANSMISSION OF ALCOHOL USE DISORDER IN EMERGING AND YOUNG ADULTHOOD Sarah L. Tragesser 1, Andrew.
Implicit Vs. Explicit Peer Rejection Megan M. Schad, Amori Yee Mikami, Joseph P. Allen University of Virginia We would like to thank the National Institute.
Results  The cluster analysis resulted in a four-group solution, chosen based on maximizing the variance (53% in the present solution) accounted for relative.
 1,001 adolescent boys (47%) and girls (53%)  Fairly diverse: 58% Caucasian; 23% African American,12% Hispanic, 2% Asian, 5% Other  Age Range:
Social Anxiety and College Drinking: An Examination of Coping and Conformity Drinking Motives Lindsay S. Ham, Ph.D. and Tracey A. Garcia, B.A. Florida.
Table 1 Hierarchical Regression Predicting Drinking to Cope Note. Model 1: R 2 =.169, p
Coping with Hurricane Katrina: Exposure and Outcomes among African American and European American Youth Ian K.Villalta 1, Claudio D.Ortiz 2, Armando A.
MODEL 2 MODEL 1 Secular, but not Religious, Coping Predicts Self-Control Gretchen Schultz & Tara Poncelet Faculty Collaborator: Jeffrey Goodman, Ph.D.
The Role of Close Family Relationships in Predicting Multisystemic Therapy Outcome: An Investigation of Sex Differences ABSTRACT BACKGROUND: Multisystemic.
INTRODUCTION Maternal and paternal depression are associated with childhood externalizing and internalizing behavior problems. Few studies have examined.
◦ th and 11 th grade high school students (54% girls) ◦ 63% Caucasian; 24% African-American; 13% Hispanic; remaining were Asian or “other” ◦ Mean.
General and Feeding Specific Behavior Problems in a Community Sample of Children Amy J. Majewski, Kathryn S. Holman & W. Hobart Davies University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Recruiting and Retaining “La Familia Latina” in Child and Adolescent Anxiety Treatment Research Armando A. Pina, Claudio D. Ortiz, and Wendy K. Silverman.
Elevated Reports of Anxiety Symptoms among Pediatric Chronic Pain Patients: A Need for Routine Screening? Susan T. Heinze¹, B.A., Kim Anderson Khan², ³,
Abstract A longitudinal study designed to follow children of alcohol and drug dependent fathers from adolescence into adulthood RISK began in 1993 and.
Method Introduction Results Discussion Mean Negative Cigarette Systoli Previous research has reported that across the nation 29% of college students engage.
Broadening the Study of Risk & Protective Factors for Depression, Drug Use, and HIV Risk among YMSM Healthy Young Men’s Study (HYM) Community, Health Outcomes,
A multilevel structural equation modeling analysis of vulnerabilities and resilience resources influencing affective adaptation to chronic pain John A.
Research on the relationship between childhood sleep problems and substance use in adolescents and young adults is limited. This knowledge gap has been.
Method Introduction Discussion Participants: Data came from Waves I and II of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health). The analysis.
Results Introduction Conclusions Method
The Potential Mediating Role of Emotion Dysregulation
Conclusions & Implications Table 1: Characteristics of Sample (N=156)
This research was supported by NIAAA K01AA
Participants and Procedures
Self-discrepancies in the Social Role of Mother: Associations between Self-discrepancies and Negative Affect Nicole J. Holmberg, Laura D. Pittman, Emily.
PRIMARY INSOMNIA EVALUATION
Introduction Results Methods Conclusions
2University of Virginia
Data Analytic Strategy and Results
Lauren A. Barlotta & David E. Szwedo James Madison University
Presentation transcript:

Participants Data corresponding to 660 young adults (50% female) who are participants in a larger ongoing longitudinal study of familial alcoholism were examined in this study (Chassin et al., 1991; Chassin et al., 1999). Among Latino participants, 90.75% reported being born in the U.S., 3% were born in Mexico, and the remaining were born elsewhere (Latin American country: 1%; non-Latin American country: 1%; 4.25% had missing data on this variable). Additional sociodemographic data are as follow: Measures  Mood and Anxiety Symptom Questionnaire (MASQ; Watson, Clark, et al., 1995)  Child Behavior Checklist – Somatic scale (CBCL; Achenbach & Edelbrock, 1981)  DSM-IV AUD symptom checklist (Chassin et al., 1991; 1999) Procedures COAs were identified using court records, health maintenance organization (HMO) wellness questionnaires, and community telephone surveys. Non-COAs were identified using reverse directories to find individuals residing in the same neighborhood as the identified COAs. After providing informed consent (assent for children), measures were administered by trained research assistants and all participants completed the measures in English. Data from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism show that about 18 million Americans suffer from alcohol use disorders (AUD) and National Comorbidity Study data indicate that a significant proportion of those with AUD also suffer from anxiety and depression (37% and 28%, respectively; Li, Hewitt, & Grant, 2004). There also are data showing that in some segments of Latinos there is a higher prevalence of AUD, depression, and anxiety symptoms compared to their Caucasian counterparts (NCLR, 2004). However, little is known about the relations from anxiety and depression to alcohol symptoms, particularly among Latinos. Thus, the purpose of this study was to examine whether anxiety and depression prospectively and differentially predict alcohol symptoms, particularly among Latinos (mostly Mexican-origin young adults). To examine this issue, secondary analyses of data from Chassin, Rogosch, and Barrera (1991) and Chassin, Pitts, Delucia, and Todd (1999) were used, and anxiety and depression were conceptualized using Clark and Watson’s (1991) tripartite model. According to Clark and Watson (1991):  High Negative Affect (+NA) is common to both anxiety and depression, low Positive Affect (-PA) is specific to depression and high Physiological Hyperarousal (+PH) to anxiety.  NA is measured as upset, angry, afraid, sad, stressed, guilty, disgusted, and worried.  PA is measured as active, delighted, enthusiastic, proud, and excited about life.  PH is measured as somatic symptoms of tension and anxiety such as feeling dizzy or lightheaded, shortness of breath, trembling, and/or shaking of hands. Using +NA to denote both anxiety and depression, -PA for depression, and +PH for anxiety, the relations between each of these three components and alcohol symptoms were examined using structural equation modeling (see Figures 1 and 2). Acknowledgement: This research was made possible by a grant from the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (AA16213) awarded to Laurie Chassin, Ph.D. and funding from the APA – MFP awarded to Ian K. Villalta. Results Does Anxiety and Depression Prospectively Predict Alcohol Symptoms in Caucasian and Latino Young Adults? Ian K. Villalta, Laurie Chassin, and Armando A. Pina Department of Psychology, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ Table 2. Correlations among the study’s variables Table 1. Means (SD) for PH, NA, PA, and AUD symptoms Figure 1. Path analytic model for full sample Figure 2 shows a model used to test the relations between the study’s focal variables by ethnicity (Caucasian vs. Latinos). The fit indices pertaining to the model tested by ethnicity, constrained, indicated good model fit [χ 2 (31) = 33.41, p =.35, SRMR =.04, RMSEA =.02, CFI =.99] [the unconstrained model also showed good fit, χ 2 (6) = 11.04, p =.09, SRMR =.02, RMSEA =.05, CFI =.99]. A chi-square difference test comparing the fit of the constrained model and unconstrained model showed that the model grouped by ethnicity was invariant [∆χ 2 (25) = 25.55, p =.43]. Analyses also were conducted with COA status, sex, and age as focal independent variables and results showed invariance across the models corresponding to these variables with one exception: there was variance across sex. However, when the relations among the Time1 variables were freely estimated the model was invariant. Introduction Method Overall, findings indicate that whereas physiological hyperarousal and negative affect are related to AUD symptoms, these factors do not predict AUD symptoms prospectively (over 5 years). Results also show that positive affect prospectively predicts AUD symptoms. These findings suggest that:  with age, young adults may use strategies for coping with anxiety and depression and rely less on alcohol to suppress negative emotionality.  the relation among anxiety, depression, and AUD symptoms becomes null perhaps because anxiety and depression sometimes remit spontaneously.  the positive affect result may reflect young adults’ alcohol use for social enhancement purposes, although its relation to clinical symptoms levels is of public health concern. In terms of ethnicity, physiological hyperarousal, negative affect, and positive affect were related to AUD symptoms similarly across Caucasian and Latino young adults. These findings may be explained by:  the homogeneity of the Caucasian and Latino samples used in this study (e.g., the majority of participants were born in the U.S., all completed the measures in English).  anxiety and depression not placing Latino young adults at greater risk for AUD symptoms relative to their Caucasian counterparts. The present study has some implications for service providers: (1) clinicians working with clients who present with AUD symptoms should assess for the presence of anxiety and depression (and vise versa), (2) clinicians might need to conduct functional analyses of alcohol use to determine whether alcohol is being use to suppress negative emotionality or increase positive affect, (3) clinicians should consider using anxiety and depression reduction strategies as part of the their AUD treatment plans when working with Caucasian and Latino young adults. Note. COA = Children of Alcoholic. *p <.05, **p <.01, ***p <.001. Discussion Results showed that the model depicted in Figure 1 fit the data well [χ 2 (3) = 6.75, p =.08, SRMR =.02, RMSEA =.04, CFI =.99]. Path coefficients indicate that COA status, sex, age, PH, and NA relate to AUD symptoms at Time 1. In addition, COA status, PA, and Time 1 AUD symptoms predict Time 2 AUD symptoms. Figure 2. Path analytic model tested by ethnicity Solid lines indicate significant paths. Dotted lines indicate non-significant paths. Note. AUD = Alcohol Use Disorder. Solid lines indicate significant paths. Dotted lines indicate non-significant paths. EthnicityParental AlcoholismAge 74% Caucasian49% children of alcoholics (COAs)Time 1: M = 21.1 years (SD = 2.32) 26.2% Latino51% children of non-alcoholicsTime 2: M = 26.5 years (SD = 2.55)