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Article
Perceived Parental Relationships and Health‐Risk Behaviors in College‐Attending Emerging Adults
Journal of Marriage and Family (2009)
  • Seth J. Schwartz, University of Miami
  • Byron L. Zamboanga, Smith College
  • Russell D. Ravert, University of Missouri
  • Su Yeong Kim, University of Texas at Austin
  • Robert S. Weisskirch, California State University, Monterey Bay
  • Michelle K. Williams, University of Connecticut
  • Melina Bersamin, California State University, Sacramento
  • Gordon E. Finley, Florida International University
Abstract
The present study investigated the association of perceived parenting with health‐risk behaviors in an ethnically diverse sample of 1,728 college‐attending emerging adults. Participants completed retrospective measures of perceived maternal and paternal nurturance, connection, psychological control, and disrespect and reported their frequency of binge drinking, illicit drug use, unsafe sexual behavior, and impaired driving. Multivariate Poisson regression analyses indicated that perceived paternal acceptance was associated inversely with 6 of the 12 health‐risk behaviors measured, whereas perceived mothering was related only to 2 of these health‐risk behaviors. These patterns were consistent across gender, ethnicity, and family structure.
Keywords
  • emerging adulthood,
  • ethnicity,
  • father-childrelations,
  • parenting,
  • sexual behavior,
  • substance abuse
Publication Date
2009
DOI
10.1111/j.1741-3737.2009.00629.x
Citation Information
Seth J. Schwartz, Byron L. Zamboanga, Russell D. Ravert, Su Yeong Kim, et al.. "Perceived Parental Relationships and Health‐Risk Behaviors in College‐Attending Emerging Adults" Journal of Marriage and Family Vol. 71 Iss. 3 (2009) p. 727 - 740
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/rob-weisskirch/27/