Childhood executive control and adolescent substance use: Mediation via parent–child relationship quality

Author:

Patwardhan Irina1ORCID,Guo Ying2,Fleming Charles B.3,James Tiffany D.4,Nelson Jennifer Mize4,Espy Kimberly Andrews5,Nelson Timothy D.6,Mason W. Alex7

Affiliation:

1. Child and Family Translational Research Center Boys Town, Boys Town NE

2. Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, School of Public Health University of Nevada Las Vegas NV

3. Center for the Study of Health and Risk Behaviors University of Washington Seattle WA

4. Office of Research and Economic Development University of Nebraska–Lincoln

5. Office of the Provost University of Texas at San Antonio

6. Department of Psychology University of Nebraska–Lincoln

7. Department of Youth and Family Studies, Center for Research on Children, Youth, Families, and Schools University of Nebraska– Lincoln

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThe goal of the current study was to test prospective direct and indirect associations between preschool executive control (EC), parental affective quality and harsh discipline, and adolescent substance use (e‐cigarettes, cannabis, and alcohol) while accounting for participants' age, sex, family history of substance use, and family socioeconomic status.MethodParticipants were 313 youth (49% boys; 70.9% European American) and their parents who participated in a longitudinal cohort‐sequential study on the development of EC in preschool and its associations with subsequent health outcomes. Substance use initiation and frequency (e‐cigarettes, cannabis, and alcohol) were obtained via phone surveys from youth who participated in adolescent assessments. Parental affective quality and harsh discipline were obtained from parental questionnaires in adolescence.ResultsThe direct effects from preschool EC on adolescent substance use were statistically nonsignificant for e‐cigarettes, cannabis, and alcohol. Mediation analyses revealed a statistically significant indirect effect from preschool EC to adolescent use of e‐cigarettes through harsh discipline (b = −0.07 [95% CI = −0.18; −0.01]; β = −0.04). The associations between preschool EC and any of the substance use outcomes in adolescence through parental affective quality were nonsignificant.ConclusionsThis study fills significant gaps in the emerging literature on longitudinal contributions of child characteristics to parenting behaviors, suggesting that early EC deficiencies may elicit more harsh discipline during adolescence, ultimately leading to higher adolescent engagement in e‐cigarette use.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institute of Mental Health

National Institute on Drug Abuse

Publisher

Wiley

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