2011
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-706
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Parental alcohol use and adolescent school adjustment in the general population: Results from the HUNT study

Abstract: BackgroundThis study investigates the relationship between parental drinking and school adjustment in a total population sample of adolescents, with independent reports from mothers, fathers, and adolescents. As a group, children of alcohol abusers have previously been found to exhibit lowered academic achievement. However, few studies address which parts of school adjustment that may be impaired. Both a genetic approach and social strains predict elevated problem scores in these children. Previous research ha… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(78 citation statements)
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References 56 publications
(79 reference statements)
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“…Our measures of attention and conduct problems were calculated using items from a module on school adjustment. Questions from this module have been used in several studies, although in different ways 26 27. The attention problems score included the statements ‘cannot sit still’ and ‘have difficulties concentrating’.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our measures of attention and conduct problems were calculated using items from a module on school adjustment. Questions from this module have been used in several studies, although in different ways 26 27. The attention problems score included the statements ‘cannot sit still’ and ‘have difficulties concentrating’.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Parents were asked about their children’s exposure to domestic tobacco smoke and domestic alcohol consumption. Study factors were defined as binary variables - that is, domestic tobacco smoke (yes/no) and domestic alcohol consumption (yes/no) [33], [34]. Based on questions included on the 2009 US middle school Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) [35], parents and teachers were asked to report physical activity of the study subjects (“During the past 7 days, on how many days was the child physically active for a total of at least 60 minutes per day?”).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For children, parental substance use increases risks of: experiencing abuse/neglect (Cunningham & Finlay, 2012; Miller & Jang, 1977; Young, Boles, & Otero, 2007); using substances as an adolescent (Obot, Wagner, & Anthony, 2001); and developing mental health problems (Cuijpers, Langendoen, & Bijl, 1999; Kelley & Fals-Stewart, 2004; Obot & Anthony, 2004) and/or behavioral problems (Stanger et al, 1999). Existing literature on the relationship between parental substance use and their children’s school performance generally finds that children exposed to parental substance use do worse than others (Chandy, Harris, Blum, & Resnick, 1993; Hyphantis, Koutras, Liakos, & Marselos, 1991; Jennison, 2014; Marcus, 1986; McGrath, Watson, & Chassin, 1999; Rimmer, 1982; Serec et al, 2012; Torvik, Rognmo, Ask, Røysamb, & Tambs, 2011). …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%