Publication | Closed Access
Everyone Says It's OK: Adolescents’ Perceptions of Peer, Parent, and Community Alcohol Norms, Alcohol Consumption, and Alcohol-Related Consequences
83
Citations
49
References
2012
Year
Substance UseAdolescent Behavioral HealthPeer RelationshipAdolescencePsychologyAlcohol MisuseCommunity NormsCommunity Alcohol NormsYouth Well-beingAlcohol-related BehaviorHealth SciencesBehavioral SciencesAlcohol AbuseAdolescent PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentAlcohol DependenceAlcohol-related ConsequencesSubstance AbuseAdolescent CognitionAddictionSociologyAlcohol-related BehaviorsAlcohol ConsumptionMedicine
An adolescent's perception of norms is related to her or his engagement in alcohol-related behaviors. Norms have different sources, such as parents, peers, and community. We explored how norms from different sources were simultaneously related to different alcohol-related behaviors (current drinking, drunkenness, heavy episodic drinking, driving under the influence or riding with a impaired driver, and alcohol-related nonviolent consequences) using data collected in 2004 from 6,958 adolescents from 68 communities in five states. Results revealed that parent, friend, and community norms were related to adolescents' alcohol-related behavior, but the strength of these impacts varied across behaviors. The pattern of results varied when the analysis relied on all adolescents or just those who had consumed alcohol in the last year.
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