Although the proposed internalizing x externalizing interaction was also not supported as a predictor of growth in amount of use for users (frequency of marijuana use and quantity x
frequency of alcohol use), there was evidence for internalizing symptoms as a protective first - order effect on the intercepts of these outcomes.
That is, internalizing symptoms decrease the probability of alcohol use, and the timing of this protective effect depends on the co-occurrence of externalizing symptoms, but this is not true for predicting amounts of use for users (frequency of marijuana or quantity x
frequency of alcohol use).
The non-linear growth model for quantity x
frequency of alcohol use for drinkers included fixed factor loadings for the first three waves and then freely estimated loadings thereafter -LRB--2, -1, 0, 2.22, 2.61, 3.77, and 6.86 for W1 - W7, respectively).
Although the proposed interaction was not supported for probability of marijuana use, or for frequency of marijuana use or quantity x
frequency of alcohol use, there was evidence for protective first - order effects of internalizing symptoms on these outcomes.
That is, high levels of internalizing symptoms were associated with low frequency of marijuana use and with low quantity x
frequency of alcohol use.
Then at the age of 15, the adolescents reported
the frequency of their alcohol use.
They were also asked
the frequency of any alcohol use in the previous four months.
When sleep problems were found to be associated with
frequency of alcohol use, she examined whether symptoms of mental health problems or levels of parental monitoring accounted for these associations.
Not exact matches
Regularly staying out late is linked with visiting pubs or bars more often; with
frequency of alcohol consumption; with smoking, and with cannabis
use.
Impairments in processing and
using information that help with decision - making and planning simple tasks such as grocery shopping are linked with one's
frequency of alcohol or drug
use according to a new study.
Valente and his team surveyed 1,563 10th - grade students from the El Monte Union High School District in Los Angeles County in October 2010 and April 2011 about their online and offline friendship networks and the
frequency of their social media
use, smoking and
alcohol consumption.
Questions inquired about the
frequency of operating a vehicle after
using drugs or drinking
alcohol, the
frequency of riding in a car with a driver who did, and additional demographic information.
«Other illicit drug
use, regular cigarette smoking, and frequent
alcohol use each increased the risk for hashish
use; however, a main finding was that as
frequency of other marijuana
use increased, so too did risk for recent hashish
use.»
«However, while the study asks questions about
frequency and amount
of tobacco and
alcohol use, for e-cigarettes it only asks whether a young person has ever tried or purchased an e-cigarette.
New research shows that a person's response to
alcohol can predict their future drinking behavior, including their
frequency of binge drinking and the risk
of developing an
alcohol -
use disorder.
Anxiety, depression, work or financial stressors, the
use of porn as a masturbatory method (and its
frequency), consumption
of prescribed or recreational drugs and
alcohol, and physical health can all cause erectile dysfunction.
Extensive adjustment was made in these studies for demographics, cardiac risk factors, physical activity, income, and education as well as factors that may differ between LDSs and other populations such as smoking, social support,
frequency of church attendance, and
use of alcohol, tea, and coffee.
In the study, about 1.3 million women, with an average age
of 55, who visited UK breast cancer screening clinics between 1996 to 2001 answered a variety
of questions, including the type and
frequency of alcohol consumption, smoking, body mass index, exercise, and
use of oral contraceptives and hormone replacement therapy.
The team
used a validated food
frequency questionnaire to determine consumption
of fish, vegetables, fruit,
alcohol - containing beverages, dairy products, and meat.
Other studies have found that greater
frequency of parental monitoring in the home is associated with somewhat less frequent cigarette,
alcohol, and marijuana
use among adolescents (Chilcoat & Anthony, 1996; Kafka & London, 1991; Resnick et al., 1997).
2 Participants reported
alcohol use on the AUDIT - C and an additional three question set assessing
frequency and quantity
of past - year
alcohol consumption.
The tool is meant to assess whether a longer conversation about the context
of use,
frequency, and other risks and consequences
of alcohol and / or drug
use is warranted.
Assessments conducted at earlier phases are specified in previous articles.7, 8 At the 15 - year follow - up assessment, adolescents completed interviews that measured whether they had been adjudicated a person in need
of supervision (PINS) resulting from incorrigible behavior such as recurrent truancy or destroying parents» property; their
frequency of running away from home; and the number
of times they had been stopped by the police, arrested, convicted
of a crime or
of probation violations, and sent to youth correctional facilities.14 They also reported on their disruptive behavior in school; number
of school suspensions; delinquent and aggressive behavior outside school; experience
of sexual intercourse; rates
of pregnancy; lifetime number
of sexual partners; and
frequency of using cigarettes,
alcohol, and illegal drugs during the 6 - month period prior to the 15 - year interview.15
There were no significant treatment group differences in the amount
of alcohol used per drinking day, the
frequency of other drug
use (other than
alcohol or cannabis) or the severity
of drug or
alcohol use.
Secondary:
frequency and amount
of substance
use through self - report with small proportion validated through hair sample analysis; readiness to change
using questionnaires; perceived negative consequences
of alcohol or drug
use;...
Measures
of drug
use included the Timeline Followback (TLFB) interview, which assesses the
frequency of illicit drug and
alcohol use, and urine samples obtained during each assessment and treatment session.
Measures included the Youth Self - Report
of the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL), as well as the Form 90 interview, which was the primary measure
of quantity -
frequency of adolescent substance
use, yielding the total percent days, in the last 90,
of all
alcohol and drug
use.
Measures included the Youth Self - Report
of the Child Behavior Checklist, as well as the Form 90 Interview, which was the primary measure
of quantity -
frequency of adolescent substance
use, yielding the total percent days, in the last 90,
of all
alcohol and drug
use.
Furthermore, in the case
of alcohol use, the effect
of internalizing problems on the intercept
of probability and quantity x
frequency of use was positive and flipped to be negative only when externalizing symptoms were included in the model.
Available information for maternal
alcohol use and partner's
frequency of drinking 4 + units at ages 4 and 12 years and conduct problems and depressive symptoms is reported in Table 1.
In this prospective study
of upper middle class youth, we document
frequency of alcohol and drug
use, as well as diagnoses
of abuse and dependence, during early adulthood.