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- Title
Differences between White and Black young women in the relationship between religious service attendance and alcohol involvement.
- Authors
Agrawal, Arpana; Grant, Julia D.; Haber, Jon Randolph; Madden, Pamela A.F.; Heath, Andrew C.; Bucholz, Kathleen K.; Sartor, Carolyn E.
- Abstract
<bold>Background and Objectives: </bold>We examined the associations of religious attendance during childhood (C-RA) and adulthood (A-RA) with alcohol involvement (ever drinking, timing of first alcohol use, and alcohol use disorder [AUD]) in White and Black female twins. As genetic and environmental factors influence religious attendance and alcohol involvement, we examined the extent to which they contribute to their association.<bold>Methods: </bold>Data on 3,234 White and 553 Black female twins (18-29 years) from the Missouri Adolescent Female twin Study. Significant correlations between C-RA or A-RA and alcohol involvement were parsed into their additive genetic, shared environmental, and individual-specific environmental sources.<bold>Results: </bold>C-RA was associated with ever drinking and timing of first alcohol use in Whites. A-RA was associated with ever drinking and AUD in both Whites and Blacks. Shared environmental influences did not contribute to alcohol or religiosity phenotypes in Blacks. In Whites, the association between C-RA and alcohol was due to shared environmental influences, whereas the association between A-RA and alcohol was attributable to additive genetic, shared environmental, and individual-specific environmental sources. Individual-specific environment and genetics contributed to associations between A-RA and ever drinking and AUD, respectively, in Blacks.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Factors other than C-RA contribute to lower rates of alcohol involvement in Blacks. Shared environment does not contribute to links between A-RA and alcohol involvement in Blacks.<bold>Scientific Significance: </bold>The protective impact of childhood religiosity on alcohol use and misuse is important in Whites and is due to familial factors shared by religiosity and alcohol involvement. (Am J Addict 2017;26:437-445).
- Subjects
ALCOHOLISM; RELIGIOUSNESS; ALCOHOL drinking; TWINS; WHITE women; AFRICAN American women; PSYCHOLOGY of alcoholism; COMPARATIVE studies; ECOLOGY; RESEARCH methodology; MEDICAL cooperation; PRAYER; RESEARCH; RESEARCH funding; TWIN psychology; WHITE people; PSYCHOLOGY of Black people; EVALUATION research
- Publication
American Journal on Addictions, 2017, Vol 26, Issue 5, p437
- ISSN
1055-0496
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1111/ajad.12462