Table 1.
Black | White | |
Network characteristicsa | OR [95% CI] | OR [95% CI] |
Type of person | ||
Relatives (3 or more) | 0.96 [0.26, 3.51] | 0.48 [0.19, 1.23] |
Students who attend school | ||
regularly (4 or more) | 0.29 [0.08, 0.99]* | 0.20 [0.05, 0.81]* |
Employed persons (4 or more) | 0.47 [0.13, 1.68] | 1.80 [0.67,4.80] |
Homeless persons (2 or more)b | 2.53 [0.62, 10.30] | 9.82 [2.66, 36.31]* |
Drinking behavior | ||
;Relatives who drink to intox. (any) | 1.18 [0.32,4.33] | 2.02 [0.81, 5.06] |
Peers (neither relatives nor adults in positions of responsibility) | ||
who drink to intox.c | 1.01 [0.88, 1.15] | 1.23 [1.12, 1.34]** |
Notes: OR = odds ratio; CI = confidence interval; intoxication.
Each social network characteristic was examined in a separate model to avoid multicollinearity problems.
”Homeless persons” was significant in the model for White youth but not for Black youth; however, the interaction between “peers who drink” and race was not statistically significant (p < .05) in the model for the combined sample of Black and White youth (n = 335; OR = 4.42, 95% CI [0.73, 26.61], p < .10).
”Peers who drink” was significant in the model for White youth but not in the model for Black youth; the interaction between “peers who drink” and race was also significant in the model for the combined sample of Black and White youths (n = 335; OR = 1.12, 95% CI [1.05, 1.41], p < .01).
*p <.05;
**p <.01.