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Original

What is Worse? A Hierarchy of Family-Related Risk Factors Predicting Alcohol Use in Adolescence

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Pages 71-86 | Published online: 03 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The aim of the present study was to determine if family structure, perception of excessive drinking in the family, and family bonding hold a graduated importance in predicting adolescent alcohol use and their association with peers who drink excessively. Three nested linear structural models were calculated separately for frequent and excessive drinking, based on a sample of 3,127 eighth and ninth graders in Switzerland (mean age 15.3, SD 0.8) surveyed in spring 2002 in the context of the “Health Behavior in School-Aged Children (HBSC)” study. The results confirm that the perception of excessive drinking in the family is more closely related to both frequent and excessive drinking than family structure, and family bonding is more closely related than drinking perception. Adjusting for both socio-demographic variables and the association with peers who drink excessively only slightly changed the results. To predict an association with the latter, family structure was more important than the perception of drinking, but family bonding remained the predominant predictor. The results stress the graduated importance of family-related risk factors: by listening to their children's worries, by spending their free time with them, and by providing help when needed, parents might have the possibility to actively minimize the risk of frequent and excessive drinking regardless of whether they are frequent excessive drinkers or live without a partner.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Emmanuel N. Kuntsche

Emmanuel Kuntsche, M.A., works as a research assistant at the Swiss Institute for the Prevention of Alcohol and Drug Problems (SIPA) in Lausanne. He graduated in Sociology (B.A. in 1997) and Psychology (B.A. in 1994 and M.A. in 1999) from the University of Jena (Germany). He was a teaching assistant in Statistics at the Universities of Jena and Essex (UK). Currently, he is writing his Ph.D. thesis on adolescent drinking motives at the University of Maastricht (The Netherlands). His research interests concern the etiology of problem behaviors in adolescence, particularly risky single occasion drinking, cannabis use, television viewing, hostility, and violence in a contextual and cultural perspective, particularly in the family and school environment.

Hervé Kuendig

Hervé Kuendig works as a research assistant at the Swiss Institute for the Prevention of Alcohol and Drug Problems (SIPA) in Lausanne. He has a post-graduate diploma in Sociology, awarded in 2002, from the Universities of Lausanne, Geneva, Fribourg, and Neuchâtel (Switzerland). His primary research interests are the measurement of alcohol consumption in international comparisons, emergency room studies, and drinking patterns among young people.

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