Alcohol-specific rules, personality and adolescents' alcohol use: a longitudinal person-environment study
- PMID: 17567395
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2007.01855.x
Alcohol-specific rules, personality and adolescents' alcohol use: a longitudinal person-environment study
Abstract
Aims: To examine the bi-directional associations between providing alcohol-specific rules and adolescents' alcohol use. Further, to explore person-environment interactions, we tested whether Big Five personality traits moderate the assumed association between providing alcohol-specific rules and adolescents' alcohol use.
Design: Longitudinal data (three waves in 2 years) from 428 families, consisting of both parents and two adolescents (aged 13-16 years) were used for the analyses. Analyses were conducted on four samples: a group of older adolescents and a group of younger adolescents who already consumed alcohol, and a group of older and younger adolescents who were not drinking at baseline measurement.
Findings: In general, results of structural equation modelling showed that providing clear alcohol-specific rules lowers the likelihood of drinking initiation, regardless of the age of the youngsters. Once adolescents have established a drinking pattern, the impact of parental alcohol-specific rules declined or even disappeared. Finally, the Big Five personality traits did not moderate the association between providing alcohol-specific rules and adolescents' alcohol involvement.
Conclusions: In sum, in particular during the initiation phase of drinking, parents could prevent the drinking of their offspring, regardless of the age or personality of their youngsters, by providing clear alcohol-specific rules.
Comment in
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Parenting practices and adolescent alcohol use.Addiction. 2007 Jul;102(7):1019-20. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2007.01920.x. Addiction. 2007. PMID: 17567380 No abstract available.
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