Acheampong Y Amoateng
Human Sciences Research Council, Private Bag X9182, Cape Town 8000, South Africa
Brian K Barber
Child and Family Sudies, 115 JHB, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA
Lance D Erickson
Department of Sociology, JFSB 2030, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84604, USA
Abstract
Family predictors of tobacco and alcohol use were studied in random samples of school-going Black, Coloured, and White adolescents (total N=1,800) in the Cape Town Metropolitan Area. The subjects ranged in age from 14 to 17 years, with a mean age of 15.95 years. Logistic regression analysis of the data showed invariance across the three racial groups in terms of the specific family variables that were predictive, as well as their direction and magnitude of association with substance use. Essentially, higher rates of substance use for all three groups were predicted by parental behavioural control, parental monitoring/knowledge and limit setting, marital relations and family stress. The findings extend the work on South African adolescent substance use by providing a view into the proximal (family) socialising forces that are related to substance use. The findings also extend the broader work on identifying specialised effects of dimensions of socialization on adolescent functioning. The discussion section includes commentary on the cultural invariance found when measuring socialising forces at this level of generality.
Journal of Child and Adolescent Mental Health 2006, 18(1): 7–15