Parental Restriction of Mature-rated Media and Its Association with Substance Use among Argentinean Adolescents
Objective To assess the independent relation between parental restrictions on mature-rated media (M-RM) and substance use among South American adolescents. Methods Cross-sectional school-based youth survey of 3,172 students (mean age, 12.8 years; 57.6% boys) in 3 large Argentinean cities. The anonym...
Guardado en:
Publicado: |
2016
|
---|---|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_18762859_v16_n3_p282_Mejia http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_18762859_v16_n3_p282_Mejia |
Aporte de: |
id |
paper:paper_18762859_v16_n3_p282_Mejia |
---|---|
record_format |
dspace |
spelling |
paper:paper_18762859_v16_n3_p282_Mejia2023-06-08T16:30:13Z Parental Restriction of Mature-rated Media and Its Association with Substance Use among Argentinean Adolescents alcohol drugs media parenting prevention tobacco youth cannabis cocaine protective agent adolescent adult alcohol consumption Argentinian Article audiovisual equipment binge drinking cannabis use child parent relation cross-sectional study female human Internet major clinical study male parental attitude smoking social media substance use video game adolescent behavior Argentina cannabis smoking child child parent relation movie multivariate analysis parent questionnaire statistical model statistics and numerical data Substance-Related Disorders television underage drinking Adolescent Adolescent Behavior Argentina Binge Drinking Child Cross-Sectional Studies Female Humans Logistic Models Male Marijuana Smoking Motion Pictures as Topic Multivariate Analysis Parenting Parents Protective Agents Smoking Substance-Related Disorders Surveys and Questionnaires Television Underage Drinking Video Games Objective To assess the independent relation between parental restrictions on mature-rated media (M-RM) and substance use among South American adolescents. Methods Cross-sectional school-based youth survey of 3,172 students (mean age, 12.8 years; 57.6% boys) in 3 large Argentinean cities. The anonymous survey queried tobacco, alcohol, and drug use using items adapted from global youth surveys. Adolescents reported M-RM restriction for internet and video game use, television programming, and movies rated for adults. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to assess the association between parental M-RM restriction and substance use after adjustment for hourly media use, measures of authoritative parenting style, sociodemographic characteristics, and sensation-seeking. Results Substance use rates were 10% for current smoking, 32% for current drinking alcohol, 17% for past 30-day binge drinking, and 8% for illicit drug use (marijuana or cocaine). Half of the respondents reported parental M-RM restriction (internet 52%, TV 43%, adult movies 34%, video game 25%). Parental M-RM restriction was only modestly correlated with authoritative parenting measures. In multivariate analyses M-RM restriction on all 4 venues was strongly protective for all substance use outcomes. Compared with no restriction, odds ratios for substance use for full restrictions were 0.32 (0.18-0.59), 0.53 (0.38-0.07), 0.36 (0.22-0.59), and 0.49 (0.26-0.92) for current smoking, drinking, binge drinking, and illicit drug use, respectively. The most important single M-RM venue was movies. Conclusions Results of this study confirmed the protective association between parental M-RM restriction during adolescence and multiple substance use outcomes, including illicit drugs. M-RM restriction is independent of traditional parenting measures. The preponderance of the evidence supports intervention development. © 2016 Academic Pediatric Association. 2016 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_18762859_v16_n3_p282_Mejia http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_18762859_v16_n3_p282_Mejia |
institution |
Universidad de Buenos Aires |
institution_str |
I-28 |
repository_str |
R-134 |
collection |
Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA) |
topic |
alcohol drugs media parenting prevention tobacco youth cannabis cocaine protective agent adolescent adult alcohol consumption Argentinian Article audiovisual equipment binge drinking cannabis use child parent relation cross-sectional study female human Internet major clinical study male parental attitude smoking social media substance use video game adolescent behavior Argentina cannabis smoking child child parent relation movie multivariate analysis parent questionnaire statistical model statistics and numerical data Substance-Related Disorders television underage drinking Adolescent Adolescent Behavior Argentina Binge Drinking Child Cross-Sectional Studies Female Humans Logistic Models Male Marijuana Smoking Motion Pictures as Topic Multivariate Analysis Parenting Parents Protective Agents Smoking Substance-Related Disorders Surveys and Questionnaires Television Underage Drinking Video Games |
spellingShingle |
alcohol drugs media parenting prevention tobacco youth cannabis cocaine protective agent adolescent adult alcohol consumption Argentinian Article audiovisual equipment binge drinking cannabis use child parent relation cross-sectional study female human Internet major clinical study male parental attitude smoking social media substance use video game adolescent behavior Argentina cannabis smoking child child parent relation movie multivariate analysis parent questionnaire statistical model statistics and numerical data Substance-Related Disorders television underage drinking Adolescent Adolescent Behavior Argentina Binge Drinking Child Cross-Sectional Studies Female Humans Logistic Models Male Marijuana Smoking Motion Pictures as Topic Multivariate Analysis Parenting Parents Protective Agents Smoking Substance-Related Disorders Surveys and Questionnaires Television Underage Drinking Video Games Parental Restriction of Mature-rated Media and Its Association with Substance Use among Argentinean Adolescents |
topic_facet |
alcohol drugs media parenting prevention tobacco youth cannabis cocaine protective agent adolescent adult alcohol consumption Argentinian Article audiovisual equipment binge drinking cannabis use child parent relation cross-sectional study female human Internet major clinical study male parental attitude smoking social media substance use video game adolescent behavior Argentina cannabis smoking child child parent relation movie multivariate analysis parent questionnaire statistical model statistics and numerical data Substance-Related Disorders television underage drinking Adolescent Adolescent Behavior Argentina Binge Drinking Child Cross-Sectional Studies Female Humans Logistic Models Male Marijuana Smoking Motion Pictures as Topic Multivariate Analysis Parenting Parents Protective Agents Smoking Substance-Related Disorders Surveys and Questionnaires Television Underage Drinking Video Games |
description |
Objective To assess the independent relation between parental restrictions on mature-rated media (M-RM) and substance use among South American adolescents. Methods Cross-sectional school-based youth survey of 3,172 students (mean age, 12.8 years; 57.6% boys) in 3 large Argentinean cities. The anonymous survey queried tobacco, alcohol, and drug use using items adapted from global youth surveys. Adolescents reported M-RM restriction for internet and video game use, television programming, and movies rated for adults. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to assess the association between parental M-RM restriction and substance use after adjustment for hourly media use, measures of authoritative parenting style, sociodemographic characteristics, and sensation-seeking. Results Substance use rates were 10% for current smoking, 32% for current drinking alcohol, 17% for past 30-day binge drinking, and 8% for illicit drug use (marijuana or cocaine). Half of the respondents reported parental M-RM restriction (internet 52%, TV 43%, adult movies 34%, video game 25%). Parental M-RM restriction was only modestly correlated with authoritative parenting measures. In multivariate analyses M-RM restriction on all 4 venues was strongly protective for all substance use outcomes. Compared with no restriction, odds ratios for substance use for full restrictions were 0.32 (0.18-0.59), 0.53 (0.38-0.07), 0.36 (0.22-0.59), and 0.49 (0.26-0.92) for current smoking, drinking, binge drinking, and illicit drug use, respectively. The most important single M-RM venue was movies. Conclusions Results of this study confirmed the protective association between parental M-RM restriction during adolescence and multiple substance use outcomes, including illicit drugs. M-RM restriction is independent of traditional parenting measures. The preponderance of the evidence supports intervention development. © 2016 Academic Pediatric Association. |
title |
Parental Restriction of Mature-rated Media and Its Association with Substance Use among Argentinean Adolescents |
title_short |
Parental Restriction of Mature-rated Media and Its Association with Substance Use among Argentinean Adolescents |
title_full |
Parental Restriction of Mature-rated Media and Its Association with Substance Use among Argentinean Adolescents |
title_fullStr |
Parental Restriction of Mature-rated Media and Its Association with Substance Use among Argentinean Adolescents |
title_full_unstemmed |
Parental Restriction of Mature-rated Media and Its Association with Substance Use among Argentinean Adolescents |
title_sort |
parental restriction of mature-rated media and its association with substance use among argentinean adolescents |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_18762859_v16_n3_p282_Mejia http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_18762859_v16_n3_p282_Mejia |
_version_ |
1768542147077734400 |