The relation
between adolescent alcohol use and peer alcohol use: A longitudinal random coefficients model
Not exact matches
«On a national level, our findings show a significant association
between recent
adolescent alcohol and cigarette
use and increased likelihood for suicidality,» Subica said.
Studying
adolescents in Southern California, researchers found that the association
between sleep and
alcohol / marijuana
use was consistent even after controlling for other known risk factors, such as depression.
For the study, the researchers first surveyed 709
adolescents between the ages of 12 and 18 at the Pittsburgh
Adolescent Alcohol Research Center (PAARC), asking them to report on their alcohol use in the pas
Alcohol Research Center (PAARC), asking them to report on their
alcohol use in the pas
alcohol use in the past year.
This is the first study to show dose - response relation
between alcohol drinking and medical services
use among a large sample of Chinese
adolescents in an Asian city with low adult drinking prevalence.
Specifically analyzes the connection
between adolescent risk factors and early exposure to
alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana
use.
Objectives This study examines associations
between different dimensions of consumerism and tobacco and
alcohol use among Scottish early
adolescents.
Her etiological research has included identifying determinants, at multiple ecological levels, of violence
between adolescent dating couples,
adolescent cigarette smoking and
alcohol use, and
adolescent sexual behavior.
A Within - Person Analysis of the Association
between Borderline Personality Disorder and
Alcohol Use in
Adolescents.
This study investigated the unique associations
between electronic media communication (EMC) with friends and
adolescent substance
use (tobacco,
alcohol, and cannabis), over and beyond the associations of face - to - face (FTF) interactions with friends and the average level of classroom substance
use.
In prior work we
used a longitudinal design to test whether the interaction
between internalizing and externalizing symptoms in early adolescence (11 — 12 years old) predicted
adolescent alcohol and drug
use (a composite of cigarette, marijuana, and other illicit SU) 2 years later (Scalco et al. 2014).
Previous studies have documented the association
between bullying and both health behaviors and symptoms.21, 43,44 These studies indicate that while being bullied is associated with difficulty making friends and lower
use of
alcohol, 21 perpetration of bullying is associated with more time spent with friends44 and increased
use of
alcohol and cigarettes.21 This suggests that although
adolescents who are bullied may be at less risk for adverse health outcomes associated with substance
use, they may be at increased risk for somatic complaints associated with poor peer relationships.3, 18 New initiatives such as the US Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration's Stop Bullying Now campaign45 should be evaluated for their efficacy in raising public awareness and reducing the prevalence of bullying.
Collapsing across gender,
adolescent - reported externalizing behavior mediated both the relation
between parent alcoholism and growth in heavy
alcohol use and the relation
between parent antisociality and growth in heavy
alcohol use.
First, do internalizing symptoms and externalizing behavior each mediate the relations
between parent psychopathology (alcoholism, antisocial personality disorder, and affective disorder) and growth in
adolescent heavy
alcohol use?
Table 4 presents the associations
between parental
alcohol use at ages 4 and 12 years (
using linear and binary terms) and
adolescent depressive symptoms before and after adjusting for potential confounding variables.
There was weak evidence of an association
between partner
alcohol use and baseline
adolescent depressive symptoms after adjusting for confounding variables (b = -.065, 95 % CI = -.13, -.00, p =.05).
The findings provided support for an indirect relationship (mediation via other - sex friendships)
between early
adolescent parental monitoring and late
adolescent alcohol use among girls only.
We
used prospective data from a large UK based population cohort (ALSPAC) to investigate the association
between parental
alcohol use, measured in units, (assessed at ages 4 and 12 years) with childhood conduct trajectories, (assessed on six occasions from 4 to 13.5 years, n = 6,927), and
adolescent depressive symptoms (assessed on four occasions from ~ 13 to ~ 18 years, n = 5,539).
Though individual, family and in particular peer risk indicators all explain some of the variance in substance
use, the differences
between adolescents in SEB / RYC compared with SEL remained significant and substantial, with the exception of heavy
alcohol consumption.
Gender Differences: Emotional Distress as an Indirect Effect
Between Family Cohesion and
Adolescent Alcohol Use.