Publication | Closed Access
Predicting adolescents' intentions to drink alcohol: outcome expectancies and self-efficacy.
94
Citations
12
References
1995
Year
Personal drinking experience was a stronger predictor of drinking intentions than was age. Still, both alcohol outcome expectancies and alcohol-related self-efficacy are significant predictors of intention to drink among both seventh and ninth graders, independent of previous drinking experience. This study indicates that postponing the onset of alcohol experimentation could be a major goal in primary alcohol prevention among adolescents, although longitudinal confirmation of these results is needed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1