Gender and intergenerational transmission of alcohol use patterns: an analysis of adult children in Moscow.

Academic Article

Abstract

  • Based on a 1996 sample of adult children and their parents in Moscow, this study investigates the degree to which alcohol use patterns are transmitted from parents to adult children and examines the roles of gender, family status, and family interaction dynamics for transmission. Findings suggest that parents' drinking and family status/interaction patterns indeed influence adult children's alcohol consumption. Frequency and volume of alcohol use is higher among children whose mothers typically drink about 3 or more drinks daily or who drink on a weekly basis. Fathers' frequency and volume of alcohol use positively influences only sons' drinking. Mothers' drinking, however, may undermine fathers' positive effect on sons. Fathers' verbal and physical abuse significantly affects daughters' consumption.
  • Status

    Publication Date

  • January 2002
  • Published In

    Keywords

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Alcohol Drinking
  • Alcoholism
  • Child of Impaired Parents
  • Family
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Moscow
  • Outcome Assessment, Health Care
  • Parent-Child Relations
  • Self-Assessment
  • Sex Distribution
  • Social Environment
  • Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Pubmed Id

  • 11848160
  • Start Page

  • 65
  • End Page

  • 87
  • Volume

  • 37
  • Issue

  • 1