Progressing from light experimentation to heavy episodic drinking in early and middle adolescence.
Journal Article (Journal Article)
Objective
Few studies have examined psychological variables related to changes in drinking patterns from light experimentation with alcohol to heavy episodic drinking in early and middle adolescence. The present study examined parental and peer influences, gender and grade level as predictors of such changes in adolescent alcohol consumption.Method
Approximately 1420 light drinkers were analyzed from Wave 1 of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health). Heavy episodic drinking activity was assessed 1 year later.Results
Gender differences in transitions to heavy episodic drinking were observed, with males being more likely than females to make a transition. Parent parameter setting and communication variables, as well as peer variables at different grade levels, buffered these gender differences.Conclusions
Adolescents who are light experimenters represent a high-risk group as a consequence of their initial consumption tendencies. Some of these adolescents graduated beyond simple experimentation and moved into patterns of consumption that could be considered dangerous. Our analyses implicated an array of parental-based buffers: parent involvement in the adolescent's life, development of good communication patterns and expressions of warmth and affection. Minimizing associations with peers who consume alcohol may also have a buffering effect. There was evidence that these buffers may dampen gender differences not so much by affecting female drinking tendencies as by keeping males at reduced levels of alcohol consumption comparable to those of females.Full Text
Duke Authors
Cited Authors
- Guilamo-Ramos, V; Turrisi, R; Jaccard, J; Wood, E; Gonzalez, B
Published Date
- July 1, 2004
Published In
Volume / Issue
- 65 / 4
Start / End Page
- 494 - 500
PubMed ID
- 15376824
Pubmed Central ID
- PMC2928558
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1934-2683
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 0096-882X
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- 10.15288/jsa.2004.65.494
Language
- eng