A Longitudinal Test of the Parent–Adolescent Family Functioning Discrepancy Hypothesis: A Trend toward Increased HIV Risk Behaviors Among Immigrant Hispanic Adolescents

David Córdova1, Seth J. Schwartz2, Jennifer B. Unger3, Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati3, Juan A. Villamar4, Daniel W. Soto3, Sabrina E. Des Rosiers5, Tae Kyoung Lee2, Alan Meca2, Miguel Ángel Cano6, Elma I. Lorenzo-Blanco7, Assaf Oshri8, Christopher P. Salas-Wright9, Brandy Piña-Watson10, Andrea J. Romero11
1University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA
2University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, USA
3University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, USA
4Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, USA
5Barry University, Miami, USA
6Florida International University, Miami, USA
7University of South Carolina, Columbia, (USA)
8University of Georgia, Athens, USA
9Boston University, Boston, USA
10Texas Tech University, Lubbock, USA
11University of Arizona, Tucson, USA

Tóm tắt

Parent-adolescent discrepancies in family functioning play an important role in HIV risk behaviors among adolescents, yet longitudinal research with recent immigrant Hispanic families remains limited. This study tested the effects of trajectories of parent–adolescent family functioning discrepancies on HIV risk behaviors among recent-immigrant Hispanic adolescents. Additionally, we examined whether and to what extent trajectories of parent-adolescent family functioning discrepancies vary as a function of gender. We assessed family functioning of 302 Hispanic adolescents (47 % female) and their parent (70 % female) at six time points over a three-year period and computed latent discrepancy scores between parent and adolescent reports at each timepoint. Additionally, adolescents completed measures of sexual risk behaviors and alcohol use. We conducted a confirmatory factor analysis to determine the feasibility of collapsing parent and adolescent reported family functioning indicators onto a single latent discrepancy variable, tested model invariance over time, and conducted growth mixture modeling (GMM). GMM yielded a three-class solution for discrepancies: High-Increasing, High-Stable, and Low-Stable. Relative to the Low-Stable class, parent–adolescent dyads in the High-Increasing and High-Stable classes were at greater risk for adolescents reporting sexual debut at time 6. Additionally, the High-Stable class was at greater risk, relative to the Low-Stable class, in terms of adolescent lifetime alcohol use at 30 months post-baseline. Multiple group GMM indicated that trajectories of parent-adolescent family functioning trajectories did not vary by gender. Implications for future research and practice are discussed.

Từ khóa


Tài liệu tham khảo