Literature DB >> 2708609

Links from emotional distress to adolescent drug use: a path model.

R C Swaim, E R Oetting, R W Edwards, F Beauvais.   

Abstract

Administered anonymous surveys asking about drug use, emotional distress, and peer drug associations to 11th and 12th grade high school students (N = 563). Emotional distress variables accounted for only 4.8% of the variance in drug use. The addition of peer drug associations as a predictor variable increased the variance accounted for to 43.4%. A path model of adolescent drug use based on peer cluster theory was tested using LISREL, and this provided a good fit with the data. As predicted, peer drug associations dominated the prediction of drug use and mediated the effect of emotional distress on drug use, with the exception of a small residual path directly from anger to drug use. The hypothesis that young people take drugs to alleviate emotional distress does not hold up well; emotional distress variables, with the exception of anger, produced only very small and indirect links to drug use.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2708609     DOI: 10.1037//0022-006x.57.2.227

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Consult Clin Psychol        ISSN: 0022-006X


  24 in total

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9.  Cannabis Use and Emotional Awareness Difficulties in Adolescents with Co-Occurring Substance Use and Psychiatric Disorders.

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10.  Delinquency as a mediator of the relation between negative affectivity and adolescent alcohol use disorder.

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