Trajectories of Acculturation and Alcohol Use among Recently Immigrated, Latina Young Adults. Article

Dillon, Frank R, Rosario, Cristalís Capielo, Ertl, Melissa M et al. (2025). Trajectories of Acculturation and Alcohol Use among Recently Immigrated, Latina Young Adults. . JOURNAL OF STUDIES ON ALCOHOL AND DRUGS, 10.15288/jsad.24-00408

cited authors

  • Dillon, Frank R; Rosario, Cristalís Capielo; Ertl, Melissa M; Shultz, Danny; Bhatti, Karan; Jagga, Justine; Porcaro, Alexandra; Rosenberg, Beth; Westbrook, Jaelen; Tineo, Yajaira Cabrera; Cano, Miguel Ángel; Girón, Karla; De La Rosa, Mario

abstract

  • Objective

    We investigated how rates of change in acculturation processes correlated with changes in alcohol use frequency and quantity among young adult Latina women after they immigrated to the United States (U.S.).

    Method

    Using univariate and parallel process latent growth modeling, we examined three year trajectories of alcohol frequency and quantity and two types of acculturation processes among 530 foreign-born, young adult Latina women (aged 18-23) during their initial years in the U.S. The acculturation processes were enculturation (the retention or adoption of Latinx cultural beliefs, values, and behaviors) and assimilation (the adoption of mainstream U.S. culture beliefs, values, and behaviors).

    Results

    We observed significant increases in assimilation and enculturation and significant declines in alcohol use frequency and quantity over the three year time period. A significant longitudinal bivariate association was found between slope estimates of assimilation and alcohol use quantity over time when accounting for months in the U.S and immigration status. Women who exhibited higher increases in assimilation levels also exhibited less of a decline in alcohol use quantity than peers over the three year period. In addition, women who resided longer in the U.S. at first assessment than peers indicated greater declines in alcohol use over the three year period.

    Conclusions

    Findings support a social norms model that posits increased alcohol use among young adult Latina women is due to assimilation into the more permissive U.S. drinking culture after immigration. Prevention interventions are encouraged to address this relationship during young Latina women's initial years in the U.S.

publication date

  • April 1, 2025

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

Medium

  • Print-Electronic