Religious Social Support Protects against Social Risks for Adolescent Substance Use.
Kristin M PevianiAlexis BrieantChristopher J HolmesBrooks King-CasasJungmeen Kim-SpoonPublished in: Journal of research on adolescence : the official journal of the Society for Research on Adolescence (2019)
We used a social developmental perspective to identify how prominent social contexts influence substance use during adolescence. Longitudinal data were collected annually from 167 parent-adolescent dyads over four years. We investigated whether parent substance use was related to adolescent substance use directly and indirectly via peer substance use and whether these associations were moderated by religious social support. Structural equation modeling (SEM) analysis indicated significant moderated mediation: Greater parent substance use predicted increases in adolescent substance use indirectly via increased peer substance use when adolescent religious social support was low or average, but not high. These results suggest religious social support may protect adolescents against prominent social risks for intergenerational substance use.