Asian American Women and Alcohol-Related Problems: The Role of Multidimensional Feminine Norms
- PMID: 25634626
- DOI: 10.1007/s10903-015-0159-3
Asian American Women and Alcohol-Related Problems: The Role of Multidimensional Feminine Norms
Abstract
Increasing rates of heavy episodic drinking (HED; four or more drinks in one sitting) and alcohol use disorders among young adult Asian American women signify the need to identify the risk and protective factors for HED and alcohol-related problems in this demographic. Multidimensional feminine norms, or the beliefs and expectations of what it means to be a woman, are theoretically relevant factors that may help elucidate within-group variability in HED and alcohol-related problems. The present study examined associations between nine salient feminine norms, HED, and alcohol-related problems among 398 second-generation Asian American college women. Our findings reveal that certain feminine norms are protective of HED and alcohol-related problems, while others are risk factors, even when controlling for well-established correlates of HED and alcohol-related problems, such as perceived peer drinking norms. The results elucidate the importance of multidimensional feminine norms and their relationship to HED and alcohol-related problems among the increasingly at-risk group, Asian American college women.
Keywords: Alcohol consumption; Alcohol related problems; Alcohol use; Asian American women; College women; Feminine norms; Heavy episodic drinking.
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