Sustained parenting and college drinking in first-year students
- PMID: 20213752
- PMCID: PMC3937263
- DOI: 10.1002/dev.20434
Sustained parenting and college drinking in first-year students
Abstract
Research indicates that for many students excessive drinking in college is a continuation of high school drinking tendencies. However, there have been limited theory-driven, systematic interventions targeting students so as to prevent alcohol misuse in their transition to college. Almost all current prevention approaches tend to be focused on younger populations and college-drinking interventions are typically delivered to students when they are already on campus. These analyses draw from a novel program of research involving parents of college freshmen based on the work of Turrisi et al. [Turrisi et al. [2001] Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 15(4), 366-372; Turrisi, et al. [2009] Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 7, 315-326] and focuses on examining: (1) the relationship between parenting and student drinking tendencies during the transitional period between high school and college and into the first year of college, and (2) the mediation process by which sustained parenting throughout the first year is related to college-drinking outcomes and consequences so as to inform future intervention efforts. The empirical evidence from this study suggests that sustained parental efforts have a beneficial effect on reducing high-risk drinking and preventing harm even at this late stage of late adolescent/early adult development.
(c) 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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References
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- Ainbinder D, Bissett D, Riedel R, Turrisi R, Ray A. Does stressing parental limits on alcohol consumption reduce binge drinking in college students?. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Rocky Mountain Psychological Association; Boise, ID. 2008, April.
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- Ainbinder D, Riedel R, Bissett D, Bendjebar J, Quesada N, Turrisi R, et al. Research on parents’ impact on college drinking behaviors.. Poster presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Counseling Psychology Association; Chicago, IL. 2008, March.
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