Introduction
Problems with alcohol or the potential to develop such problems occur within contexts of risk (Medina-Mora, Real, Villatoro, & Natera, 2013). One of the most important of these contexts is when parents have a problematic alcohol use that children can potentially observe and learn (Yap, Cheong, Zaravinos-Tsakos, Lubman, & Jorm, 2017). In the United States, one out of four children and adolescents are exposed to alcohol abuse in their family, and approximately 11 million live with an alcohol or drug user (Emshoff & Price, 1999; Lam & O’Farrell, 2011; Slutske et al., 2008). In England it is estimated that approximately three million children under 16 live with at least one parent who drinks to excess, almost half a million with a single parent who is a compulsive drinker, 2.6 million with a dangerous drinker, 300,000 with a damaging drinker, and more than 700,000 with a dependent drinker (Manning, 2011). In Mexico, it has been found that approximately 60% of the adult population age 18-65 has a family history of alcohol use, that is, has a father or mother who drinks frequently or habitually (Natera-Rey, Borges, Medina-Mora, Solis-Rojas, & Tiburcio-Sainz, 2001). A study in Nuevo Leon found that 80% of junior high school students in that state had such a history (Armendáriz et al., 2014). A study of adolescents in Tabasco reported that 56.8% lived with someone who used alcohol, most commonly the father (38.8%), followed by both parents (24.5%), the mother (13.7%), and siblings (10.8%) (Telumbre, López, Sánchez, Magnolia-Araujo, & Torres, 2017).
Having parents with drinking problems has a variety of implications for the mental health of children and adolescents (Rossow, Keating, Felix, & McCambridge, 2016). Prominent among these is that adolescents have a greater probability of using alcohol or developing related problems than children of parents who do not drink. This phenomenon is referred to broadly as intergenerational transmission of alcohol use (Campbell & Oei, 2010), which can be described as the spectrum of behaviors and characteristics related to the use of alcohol from one generation to another (Branje et al., 2020).
A number of studies have examined intergenerational transmission in the Mexican context. Using data from the 1988 National Addiction Survey (Encuesta Nacional de Adicciones, ENA), Natera-Rey et al. (2001) found that adult men with a family history of alcohol use had twice the probability of developing dependency, and women a 27% greater probability than those without such a history. In a study of students, Hernández (2014) found a positive and significant relationship (rs = .214, p < .001) between a family history of alcohol use and personal use among 256 students in the state of Tabasco. Among the significant findings in this study was that the prevalence of ever having used alcohol and that of having used it in the previous month differed according to family history (χ2 = 13.04, p = .001; χ2 = 7.32, p = .007, respectively). Armendáriz et al. (2014), in a study of 680 university students in the state of Nuevo Leon, found that a family history of alcohol use influenced the students’ own use (B = .080, p = .001). A subsequent study, with 240 high school students in the same state, found that greater alcohol use by parents was associated with an increased use by their children (rs = .196; p < .01) (Armendáriz et al., 2015). A study of 178 junior high school students in Campeche found a positive and significant relationship between family history of alcohol use and cumulative AUDIT score (rs = .164, p = .025), and also between that history and the number of alcoholic beverages the participants consumed (rs = .181, p = .005) (Telumbre et al., 2017).
More extensive international research has found that adolescents whose parents have problems with alcohol use begin to drink at earlier ages than others (Donovan & Molina, 2011; Capaldi, Tiberio, Kerr, & Pears, 2016). They also drink greater quantities of alcohol (Bailey, Hill, Oesterle, & Hawkins, 2006; Alati et al., 2014) and with greater frequency (Oshi et al., 2018; Hernández, 2014). A history of parental alcohol use has also been related with patterns of use that have major consequences for adolescent health. For example, the children of drinkers report more binge drinking (Pedersen & von Soest, 2013), have more episodes of alcohol intoxication (Latendresse at al., 2008; Haugland, Holmen, Rayndal, & Bratberg, 2013; García-Barba, Giménez-García, Castro-Calvo, Nebot-García, & Ballester-Arnal, 2018), and develop alcohol use disorder more frequently than children of non-drinkers (Meyers et al., 2014; Natera-Rey et al., 2001; Telumbre et al., 2017; Murphy, O’Sullivan, O’Donovan, Hope, & Davoren, 2016; Guo, Hawkins, Hill, & Abbot, 2001; Poelen, Engels, Scholte, Boomsma, & Willemsen, 2009).
The effect of parental alcohol use on adolescents seems to differ according to the sex of the parent, but the evidence is not clear so far. Some authors have reported that fathers’ drinking, but not mothers’, predicts adolescent children’s alcohol use (Handley & Chassin, 2009; Mares, van der Vorst, Engels, & Lichtwarck-Aschoff, 2011; Murphy et al., 2016). However, MacLeod et al. (2008) and Poelen, Scholte, Willemsen, Boomsma, and Engels (2007) found that mothers’ drinking or problems with alcohol have a greater impact. Methodological problems have difficulted the identification of these variations. Some studies collapse alcohol use by mothers and fathers into a single variable (Armstrong et al., 2013; Hernández, 2014; Pedersen & von Soest, 2013; Telumbre, 2017), while others only examine drinking by one parent (Alati et al., 2008; Cortes, Fleming, Mason, & Catalano, 2009). This latter difficulty is noted by Branje et al. (2020), who find that most studies of intergenerational transmission have included only one individual per generation, even though the children affected share genes with both of their parents.
Differences in the effects of fathers’ and mothers’ drinking might be related to a number of factors. One of these is that parents and children share environments and other characteristics that increase or decrease the association between the alcohol use of each (Branje et al., 2020). These variations could be emphasized by cultural differences in parental roles in different countries. Most studies have been conducted in the U.S., Australia, and England, and those conducted in Mexico have not explored differences related to the sex of the parent, except for that of Natera-Rey et al. (2001). The evidence for Mexico is also limited because the study populations have not been representative, and the majority of statistical analyses used have been univariate. Most international and Mexican studies have been based on non-probabilistic samples, which include only participants living in a particular region (Alati et al., 2014; Donovan & Molina, 2011; Haugland et al., 2013; Kovacs et al., 2008; MacLeod et al., 2008), who have a certain socioeconomic status (Capaldi et al., 2016; Casswell, Pledger, & Pratap, 2002), who live in areas with high crime rates (Bailey et al., 2006; Capaldi et al., 2016), or who are students from the same school (Armendáriz et al., 2015; Hernández, 2014). The nature of these samples limits the possible generalization of the results.
Analysis of the variations in this phenomenon is fundamental to strengthen research on the psychosocial mechanisms of intergenerational transmission. It can aid in the development of preventive interventions for alcohol use in children of drinkers, and also to motivate public policy regarding the consequences of alcohol use. For this reason, it is important to have evidence about the relationship between parents’ and children’s alcohol consumption that is based on a nationally representative sample. The objective of this study is thus to evaluate the association between the alcohol use of students and their perceptions of their parents’ drinking, using a random national sample.
Method
Study design
This is a secondary analysis of the National Survey of Student Drug Use (Encuesta Nacional de Consumo de Drogas en Estudiantes, ENCODE), which questioned 114,364 respondents (see Villatoro et al., 2015 for additional details about the survey).
Subjects
The ENCODE was carried out in 2014 with a random, representative, stratified, systematic cluster sampling of junior high and high school students from the 32 states of Mexico, including nine cities. The sample size was estimated considering the non-response rate of 20% found in previous studies and various reasons for the non-responses. The confidence level of the sample is 95%, with an average absolute error of .004 and a design effect of 2. The sample was weighted by group, educational level, and state in order to perform the estimation and analyze the data. The estimated sample included 127,920 respondents, with 1,560 in each stratum (a total of 4,680 per state) and 1,560 per stratum in each of the cities (a total of 4,680 per city). The final sample included 114,364 respondents, with a non-response rate of 10.6% (reflecting administrators or students who declined to participate). These were divided between 57,402 junior high school students with a non-response rate of 10.3% and 56,962 high school students with a non-response rate of 10.9%.
Measurements
Binge drinking refers to five or more drinks on a single occasion during the 30 days prior to the study. It was evaluated with the question “How often have you had five or more drinks of any alcoholic beverage on a single occasion?”
Possible dependence on alcohol. Dependence implies a series of behavioral, cognitive, or physiological phenomena that can appear after repeated alcohol use. It includes symptoms such as an intense craving for a drink, difficulty in controlling drinking, and continued drinking in spite of the consequences. It was evaluated with the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) (Babor, Higgins-Biddle, Saunders, & Monteiro, 2001); a score of 20-40 was considered a case of possible dependence (Babor & Robaina, 2016).
Problematic parental use of alcohol refers to students’ perception of their parents’ behavior related to alcohol. It was evaluated with two questions: “Do you believe your father has problems related to his use of alcohol?” and “Do you believe your mother has problems related to her use of alcohol?” For analysis purposes, these questions were grouped under a variable “Problematic parental use of alcohol,” which was assigned a value of 0 if neither parent had a problem with the use of alcohol (NPA), 1 if the father had a problem with the use of alcohol (FPA), 2 if the mother had a problem with the use of alcohol (MPA), and 3 if both parents had a problem with the use of alcohol (BPA).
Sociodemographic variables: Sex (female, male), level of study (junior high, high school), perceived socioeconomic level (low, medium low, medium, medium high, high), type of community (urban, rural), enrollment status (full-time, part-time), employment status (not working, working), father’s education (elementary school or less, junior high school or more), mother’s education (elementary school or less, junior high school or more), and indigenous language (student or family member speaks an indigenous language, neither student nor family members speak an indigenous language).
Procedure
School authorities were asked for their permission to conduct the survey, and for survey personnel to do so in the classroom. The objectives of the study were explained to the students, and they were told that their response was voluntary, anonymous, and confidential. The anonymity and confidentiality of self-administered surveys, carried out in groups without identifying individual participants, encourages freer and more truthful responses (Harrison & Hughes, 1997; Medina-Mora, Gómez-Mont, & Campillo, 1981). The survey was administered in classroom groups, with an average duration of 70 minutes. The questionnaires were sent for coding and data entry in locations used to consolidate the results. Data entry was performed using intelligent software for response consistency developed in a visual programming environment.
Ethical Considerations
The project was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the Ramón de la Fuente Muñiz National Institute of Psychiatry (Instituto Nacional de Psiquiatría Ramón de la Fuente, INPRFM) (Approval No. CEI/C/020/2014). Students’ participation was voluntary, and they were informed that they could decide to stop answering questions at any time.
Statistical analysis
A univariate chi-square analysis was first conducted to analyze the association between parental use of alcohol, socioeconomic predictors, and students’ binge drinking and possible dependence. For the multiple analysis, the different predictors were considered simultaneously, using the estimation of prevalence ratios (PR) based on generalized linear models (GLM) with log link and binomial distribution, including only those students who responded all the variables analyzed (n = 91,901). All analyses modeled the sample design of the study and were carried out with Stata statistical software (Version 13).
Results
Participant characteristics
Of the total 114,364 students surveyed, 52% were female, of whom 61.4% were junior high school students and 14.3% also worked; 21% reported a low and 19.1% a high socioeconomic level. The majority (85.2%) lived in urban areas, and 11.1% spoke an indigenous language or lived in a household where one was spoken. Of the males, 62.9% were junior high school students and 29.4% also worked; 22.6% reported a socioeconomic level of medium to medium-high, 84.5% lived in urban areas, and 11.7% spoke an indigenous language or lived in a household where one was spoken (Table 1).
Girls | Boys | Total | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
n | N | % | n | N | % | n | N | % | |||
Parents’ problematic alcohol use | |||||||||||
None (NPA) | 49,885 | 4,542,105 | 86.5 | 48,308 | 4,490,772 | 86.3 | 98,193 | 9,032,877 | 86.4 | ||
Father (FPA) | 6,321 | 553,340 | 10.5 | 6,050 | 550,651 | 10.6 | 12,371 | 1,103,991 | 10.6 | ||
Mother (MPA) | 826 | 68,968 | 1.3 | 814 | 70,685 | 1.4 | 1,640 | 139,653 | 1.3 | ||
Both (BPA) | 1,051 | 85,418 | 1.6 | 1,109 | 93,875 | 1.8 | 2,160 | 179,293 | 1.7 | ||
Sex | |||||||||||
Female | 58,083 | 5,249,831 | 50.2 | ||||||||
Male | 56,281 | 5,205,983 | 49.8 | ||||||||
School level | |||||||||||
Junior high | 28,825 | 3,225,676 | 61.4 | 28,577 | 3,275,978 | 62.9 | 57,402 | 6,501,654 | 62.2 | ||
High school | 29,258 | 2,024,155 | 38.6 | 27,704 | 1,930,005 | 37.1 | 56,962 | 3,954,160 | 37.8 | ||
Perceived socioeconomic level | |||||||||||
Low | 11,289 | 1,028,900 | 21.0 | 8,843 | 813,165 | 16.8 | 20,132 | 1,842,065 | 18.9 | ||
Medium low | 11,016 | 1,002,065 | 20.5 | 10,180 | 935,263 | 19.3 | 21,196 | 1,937,328 | 19.9 | ||
Medium | 10,234 | 927,323 | 19.0 | 10,450 | 967,876 | 20.0 | 20,684 | 1,895,199 | 19.5 | ||
Medium high | 10,784 | 997,163 | 20.4 | 11,662 | 1,095,414 | 22.6 | 22,446 | 2,092,577 | 21.5 | ||
High | 10,399 | 933,344 | 19.1 | 11,013 | 1,024,710 | 21.2 | 21,412 | 1,958,055 | 20.1 | ||
Type of community | |||||||||||
Rural | 6,068 | 778,616 | 14.8 | 6,299 | 804,958 | 15.5 | 12,367 | 1,583,574 | 15.1 | ||
Urban | 52,015 | 4,471,215 | 85.2 | 49,982 | 4,401,025 | 84.5 | 101,997 | 8,872,240 | 84.9 | ||
Student status | |||||||||||
Full-time | 46,566 | 4,198,341 | 81.2 | 43,318 | 3,996,550 | 78.2 | 89,884 | 8,194,892 | 79.7 | ||
Not in school | 10,448 | 970,537 | 18.8 | 11,864 | 1,116,178 | 21.8 | 22,312 | 2,086,715 | 20.3 | ||
Employment status | |||||||||||
Not working | 49,258 | 4,435,957 | 85.7 | 39,397 | 3,606,054 | 70.6 | 88,655 | 8,042,011 | 78.2 | ||
Working | 7,932 | 741,160 | 14.3 | 15,849 | 1,502,519 | 29.4 | 23,781 | 2,243,679 | 21.8 | ||
Father’s education | |||||||||||
Junior high or more | 39,266 | 3,450,715 | 72.0 | 39,139 | 3,517,159 | 74.4 | 78,405 | 6,967,874 | 73.2 | ||
Elementary school or less | 13,684 | 1,339,965 | 28.0 | 12,203 | 1,209,941 | 25.6 | 25,887 | 2,549,907 | 26.8 | ||
Mother’s education | |||||||||||
Junior high or more | 40,337 | 3,509,946 | 71.1 | 40,095 | 3,581,344 | 74.0 | 80,432 | 7,091,290 | 72.6 | ||
Elementary school or less | 14,454 | 1,423,568 | 28.9 | 12,533 | 1,258,098 | 26.0 | 26,987 | 2,681,665 | 27.4 | ||
Type of community | |||||||||||
Indigenous community | 6,165 | 583,716 | 11.1 | 6,378 | 608,249 | 11.7 | 12,543 | 1,191,965 | 11.4 | ||
Not indigenous community | 51,918 | 4,666,115 | 88.9 | 49,903 | 4,597,734 | 88.3 | 101,821 | 9,263,849 | 88.6 |
Note: n = Non-weighted frequency of respondents.
History of parents’ problematic alcohol use
Of the students responding to the survey, 10.6% believed their father had problems with alcohol use, 1.3% believed that their mother did, and 1.7% believed that both parents did (Table 1). These numbers were practically identical between boys and girls.
Parental alcohol use and binge drinking
Of the students who believed one or both of their parents had a problematic alcohol use, 19.6% of those who believed it of the father (FPA), 34.8% of those who believed it of the mother (MPA), and 34.2% of those who believed it of both parents (BPA), reported binge drinking of their own in the previous month (Table 2). The prevalence ratio analysis found that those in the MPA group had twice the risk for binge drinking (PR = 2.12; 95% CI [1.94, 2.32]) as those without parents with problematic use (NPA), and they also showed a greater risk than those in the FPA group. Those in the BPA group also had twice the risk for binge drinking as those in the NPA group (PR = 2.18; 95% CI [2.01, 2.37]). Those in the FPA group had a 35% greater risk for binge drinking (Table 2).
Binge drinking | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
n | N | % | X 2 | PR | 95% CI | p | |
Parents’ problematic alcohol use | |||||||
None (NPA) | 13,901 | 1,190,706 | 13.2 | 1507.8* | 1 | ||
Father (FPA) | 2,491 | 216,252 | 19.6 | 1.35 | 1.27-1.43 | .001 | |
Mother (MPA) | 622 | 48,566 | 34.8 | 2.12 | 1.94-2.32 | .001 | |
Both (BPA) | 749 | 61,296 | 34.2 | 2.18 | 2.01-2.37 | .001 | |
Sex | |||||||
Female | 8,295 | 699,602 | 13.3 | 129.7* | 1 | ||
Male | 9,468 | 817,217 | 15.7 | 1.11 | 1.06-1.17 | .001 | |
School level | |||||||
Junior high | 4,559 | 559,368 | 8.6 | 5283.7* | 1 | ||
High school | 13,204 | 957,451 | 24.2 | 2.62 | 2.42-2.84 | .001 | |
Perceived socioeconomic level | |||||||
Low | 3,074 | 256,111 | 13.9 | 55.2* | 1 | ||
Medium low | 3,273 | 274,754 | 14.2 | 1.03 | .96-1.10 | .329 | |
Medium | 3,188 | 276,887 | 14.6 | 1.10 | 1.03-1.18 | .004 | |
Medium high | 3,396 | 300,934 | 14.4 | 1.11 | 1.03-1.19 | .002 | |
High | 3,744 | 317,229 | 16.2 | 1.27 | 1.19-1.36 | .001 | |
Type of community | |||||||
Rural | 1,366 | 153,453 | 9.7 | 382.07* | 1 | ||
Urban | 16,397 | 1,363,366 | 15.4 | 1.15 | 1-1.31 | .037 | |
Student status | |||||||
Full-time | 13,466 | 1,148,522 | 14 | 93.07* | 1 | ||
Not in school | 3,991 | 345,015 | 16.5 | 1.13 | 1.07-1.19 | .001 | |
Employment status | |||||||
Not working | 12,153 | 1,040,725 | 12.9 | 816.8* | 1 | ||
Working | 5,346 | 453,504 | 20.2 | 1.47 | 1.41-1.54 | .001 | |
Father’s education | |||||||
Junior high or more | 12,656 | 1,061,873 | 15.2 | 41.4* | 1 | ||
Elementary school or less | 3,860 | 347,773 | 13.6 | 1.01 | .96-1.06 | .600 | |
Mother’s education | |||||||
Junior high or more | 13,152 | 1,097,211 | 15.5 | 95.3* | 1 | ||
Elementary school or less | 3,877 | 351,164 | 13.1 | .94 | .88-.99 | .043 | |
Speaks indigenous language | |||||||
Participant or family member | 1,571 | 142,183 | 11.9 | 78.9* | 1 | ||
Neither participant nor family member | 16,192 | 1,374,636 | 14.8 | 1.13 | 1.05-1.23 | .001 |
Notes: n = Non-weighted frequencies of persons with binge drinking. N = Expanded population with binge drinking.
*p < .05
The analyses also showed that being in high school was the sociodemographic characteristic most associated with students’ binge drinking (PR = 2.62; 95% CI [2.42, 2.84]), and that boys, those with jobs, and those at medium-high and high socioeconomic levels showed a greater risk for binge drinking (Table 2).
Parental alcohol use and students’ possible alcohol dependence
Possible dependence was found in 2.6% of students in the FPA group, 8.2% in the MPA group, and 8% in the BPA group (Table 3). The prevalence ratio analysis showed a risk of possible dependence that was 83% greater in the FPA group (PR = 1.83; 95% CI [1.59, 2.27]), and four times greater in the MPA group (PR = 5.43; 95% CI [4.20, 7.03]) and in the BPA group (PR = 5.14; 95% CI [3.99, 6.62]) than in the NPA group. The risk of possible dependence was also greater in the MPA than in the FPA group (Table 3). In addition to these relationships with parental alcohol use, high school students, students with jobs, those with a high socioeconomic level, boys, and those who were not studying full-time had greater risk for possible dependence (Table 3).
Possible Dependence | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
n * | N | % | X 2 | PR | 95% CI | p | |
Parents’ problematic alcohol use | |||||||
None (NPA) | 1,276 | 113,412 | 1.3 | 1084.8* | 1.00 | ||
Father (FPA) | 343 | 28,168 | 2.6 | 1.83 | 1.59-2.27 | .001 | |
Mother (MPA) | 143 | 11,476 | 8.2 | 5.43 | 4.20-7.03 | .001 | |
Both (BPA) | 181 | 14,374 | 8 | 5.14 | 3.99-6.62 | .001 | |
Sex | |||||||
Female | 754 | 64,597 | 13.3 | 100.6* | 1.00 | ||
Male | 1,189 | 101,833 | 15.7 | 1.35 | 1.17-1.57 | .001 | |
School level | |||||||
Junior high | 524 | 65,866 | 1 | 413.5* | 1.00 | ||
High school | 1,419 | 101,565 | 2.6 | 2.36 | 1.97-2.83 | .001 | |
Perceived socioeconomic level | |||||||
Low | 348 | 26,704 | 1.5 | 17.9** | 1 | ||
Medium low | 329 | 27,620 | 1.4 | .98 | .75-1.27 | .907 | |
Medium | 333 | 32,514 | 1.7 | 1.21 | .95-1.52 | .107 | |
Medium high | 367 | 32,397 | 1.5 | 1.19 | .93-1.51 | .152 | |
High | 444 | 36,314 | 1.9 | 1.45 | 1.15-1.84 | .002 | |
Type of community | |||||||
Rural | 138 | 13,680 | .9 | 70.1* | 1 | ||
Urban | 1,805 | 153,750 | 1.7 | 1.42 | 1.07-1.90 | .015 | |
Student status | |||||||
Full-time | 1,367 | 118,904 | 1.5 | 69.6* | 1 | ||
Not in school | 538 | 46,539 | 2.2 | 1.34 | 1.13-1.60 | .001 | |
Employment status | |||||||
Not working | 1,146 | 98,643 | 1.2 | 357.03* | 1 | ||
Working | 764 | 65,942 | 2.9 | 2.00 | 1.72-2.33 | .001 | |
Father’s education | |||||||
Junior high or more | 1,367 | 115,696 | 1.7 | 1.16 | 1 | ||
Elementary school or less | 435 | 39,899 | 1.6 | 1.11 | .92-1.33 | .270 | |
Mother’s education | |||||||
Junior high or more | 1,455 | 122,641 | 1.7 | 19.4* | 1 | ||
Elementary school or less | 398 | 36,091 | 1.3 | .83 | .68-1.01 | .067 | |
Speaks indigenous language | |||||||
Participant or family member | 228 | 18,471 | 1.6 | .252 | 1 | ||
Neither participant nor family member | 1,715 | 148,959 | 1.6 | .94 | .74-1.19 | .634 |
Notes: n = Non-weighted frequencies of persons with possible dependency. N = Expanded population with possible dependency.
*p < .05;
**p < .001
Discussion and conclusion
The prevalence of parental alcohol use found in this study was less than that reported for other countries, where the frequency of hazardous consumption ranges from 16% to 25% in fathers and 5% to 13% in mothers (Haugland et al., 2013; Lieb et al., 2002; McManus, Bebbington, Jenkins, & Brugha, 2016; Ohannessian, 2012; Torvik, Rognmo, Ask, Røysamb, & Tambs, 2011). The estimations in the current study are closest to those of McManus et al. (2016) and Torvik et al. (2011), who found harmful use among approximately 2% of mothers. This comparison should be taken with caution, as the indicators those authors used (dangerous and harmful use, as measured with the AUDIT) are different than the method of measuring parental alcohol use employed in our study.
In comparison to other studies in Mexico, our results are similar to those of Telumbre et al. (2017) for junior high school students from Campeche, where 10.8% of the participants reported having a father who drank once a week to the point of being drunk and 1.4% reported having a mother who did so. Armendáriz et al. (2014), who studied university students in Nuevo Leon, found higher percentages: approximately 40% of their respondents had a history of family alcohol use. These differences between international and Mexican estimates could be explained by one of the following reasons: 1. some measures combine the alcohol consumption of both parents, resulting in higher prevalence rates; 2. the measure of family history of alcohol use in the Mexican studies is based on frequent use, not necessarily problematic use, and may therefore be an overestimation; 3. some studies measure the volume or frequency of use, and others, including the present study, use methods based on children’s perceptions; 4. another factor that may contribute to the discrepancies could be cultural differences in the way alcohol is consumed: in some countries, including Mexico, drinking by women may pass unnoticed, or it may be part of traditions where it is not seen as problematic; and 5. reporting of alcohol use could be greater among older respondents: parents could use alcohol more openly in front of adult children such as university students.
One of the main findings of the current study is that students with a history of parental alcohol use have a greater risk for binge drinking and possible dependence than those whose parents did not have problems with alcohol use, which provides evidence for the intergenerational transmission of alcohol use in the Mexican population. The effect is similar to that reported in other studies. The values obtained in the PR analysis are close to those reported in studies in other countries (Alati et al., 2014; Capaldi et al., 2016; Maldonado, Reingle, Delcher, & Branchini, 2011; MacLeod et al., 2008; Murphy et al., 2016). The values reflecting the development of dependence in males with family histories of alcohol use are similar to other studies in Mexico, although the latter evaluated adults (Natera-Rey et al., 2001). The comparison of similarities and differences between these studies is complicated by their use of different statistical measures, but the direction of the results is similar.
Our results support the hypothesis that the effect of parental use of alcohol is different for fathers and mothers. We found that problematic use by mothers is associated with a greater risk of binge drinking and possible dependence by students, similar to the findings in other studies (Haugland et al., 2013; Capaldi at al., 2016).These differences could be related to the fact that mothers’ use of alcohol affects different variables than fathers,’ namely the care and raising of children (Rognmo, Torvik, Ask, Røysamb, & Tambs, 2012; Haugland et al., 2013) and family organization and cohesion (Jester, Jacobson, Sokol, Tuttle, & Jacobson, 2000). Children spend more time with their mothers, so that mothers provide a closer behavioral model than fathers (Capaldi et al., 2016). The use of alcohol by women is also accompanied by increased depression and less emotional availability for their children (El-Sheikh & Flanagan, 2001).
Limitations and advantages of the study
One of the limitations of this study is that the variable measuring parents’ alcohol use is based on the perceptions of their children, and this type of measurement involves various biases. Parental alcohol consumption could be underestimated because children and adolescents living with drinkers may sometimes normalize its use and consequences, and may even have positive expectations about its use (Voogt et al., 2017; Suárez, Del Moral, Martínez, John, & Musitu, 2016). This form of measurement may also lead to an underestimate of mothers’ alcohol use: in some Mexican homes, women hide their drinking (Fernández & Corral, 2018; Gómez, 2006). Fathers’ drinking, on the other hand, may be overestimated, since the problematic use of alcohol by men manifests itself in behavior that is more visible to children (Ramírez, Naal, Salinas, & Pérez, 2014). The underestimation of parental use of alcohol may lead to an underestimation of the effects of a history of parental use on students’ own alcohol use (Haugland et al., 2013).
The strengths of this study lie in the internal validity of the results, given that the sample was randomly selected. As it is nationally representative, it can therefore be generalized to the population of junior high and high school students throughout Mexico.
Implications
Although the percentages of parental use of alcohol are low, we found that the variables of alcohol use by mothers and by both parents were those that showed the greatest association with binge drinking and possible dependence in children. Our findings suggest the need to: 1. identify women in addiction treatment centers who are mothers of children and adolescents; 2. provide conditions that facilitate their adherence to treatment (for example, by providing spaces for the care of children); 3. provide interventions with a gender perspective; and 4. integrate children into intervention plans. In addition, men’s participation in women’s treatment should be seen as an opportunity to strengthen their participation in the care and raising of their children, which could in itself contribute to the success of alcohol interventions (Bell, Herring, & Annand, 2020; Huxley & Foulger, 2008).
The findings of our study suggest the importance of continued investigation of this topic with more detailed measurement of parents’ use, for example, of the length of time they have had problematic use. It would also be useful to carry out qualitative studies to examine the different effects of problematic use by mothers and fathers on the mental health of adolescents.
Our findings also provide important evidence for the intergenerational transmission of alcohol use in Mexico, which has implications for the physical and emotional health of Mexican students and the economic costs to society as a whole. Further research should evaluate the effects of mothers’ and fathers’ alcohol use on different environmental variables identified in the international literature as possible mediators, including family cohesion, interactions, and functionality, as well as child-raising skills. It should also investigate the relationship between parents’ alcohol use and different understandings about alcohol use among adolescents, such as expectations about drinking, the perception of risk, and reasons for drinking, which would help to support a cognitive model of intergenerational transmission of alcohol use (Campbell & Oei, 2010). Further research on this topic in Mexico would strengthen programs for the prevention and treatment of alcohol use. Prevention should include selective, indicated actions in family, community, and school environments, with children of drinkers identified as a high-risk population.