2020
DOI: 10.1111/acer.14298
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Effects of Observable Parent Alcohol Consequences and Parent Alcohol Disorder on Adolescent Alcohol Expectancies

Abstract: Background: Parental drinking and parent alcohol use disorder (AUD) are known predictors of adolescent positive alcohol expectancies, but their link to negative expectancies is unclear. Research suggests that parent drinking may indirectly predict adolescent expectancies through exposure to parental drinking events. However, exposure to parent negative alcohol consequences may be more relevant to adolescents' expectancies. The present study tested the mediating effect of parent observable negative alcohol cons… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…There are links between the availability of alcohol for off‐premise consumption and harms such as traumatic injury and domestic violence , and between the consumption of alcohol in the home and intimate partner violence . Furthermore, witnessing drinking in the home may have negative impacts on children and adolescents , such as ‘normalising’ negative alcohol experiences and influencing future drinking behaviours .…”
Section: Drinking At Home—what Are the Risks?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are links between the availability of alcohol for off‐premise consumption and harms such as traumatic injury and domestic violence , and between the consumption of alcohol in the home and intimate partner violence . Furthermore, witnessing drinking in the home may have negative impacts on children and adolescents , such as ‘normalising’ negative alcohol experiences and influencing future drinking behaviours .…”
Section: Drinking At Home—what Are the Risks?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Alcohol outcome expectancies are thought to influence drinking behavior both directly (Ham & Hope, 2003; Jones et al, 2001) and indirectly through drinking motivation (e.g., Cooper et al, 1995). Decades of research suggest that positive alcohol expectancies are linked to a family history of Alcohol Use Disorder (Mann et al, 1987; Waddell et al, 2020), earlier adolescent drinking and heavier drinking (e.g., Bekman et al, 2011; Cooper et al, 1988; Corbin et al, 2015; Ham & Hope, 2003; Jones et al, 2001; Lac & Luk, 2019), alcohol-related problems (e.g., Corbin et al, 2015; Pabst et al, 2014; Turrisi et al, 2000), development of alcohol use disorder (AUD; e.g., Brown et al, 1985; Cooper et al, 1988; Jones et al, 2001), and poor AUD treatment outcomes (e.g., Sebold et al, 2017). Less is known about negative alcohol expectancies, which inconsistently are linked with use behavior (e.g., Fromme et al, 1993; Greenfield et al, 2009; Lac & Luk, 2019; Lee et al, 1999; McMahon & Jones, 1993; Walther et al, 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Outcome expectancies, particularly for alcohol, have been studied for decades, and are conceptualized as the positive (e.g., I will become sociable) and negative (e.g., I will become aggressive) anticipated effects of alcohol on mood and behavior (Jones et al, 2001). Research suggests that expectancies arise from both direct experience with alcohol (e.g., Smith et al, 1995) as well as indirect, observational experience (e.g., peer use, family history of alcohol use disorder [AUD], media; Mann et al, 1987; Waddell, Blake, et al, 2020). Children and adolescents typically have stronger negative expectancies, but expectancies become more positive with age and experience (Wiers et al, 1998).…”
Section: Outcome Expectancies and Substance Use Behaviormentioning
confidence: 99%