2001
DOI: 10.1037/0893-164x.15.1.25
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Perceived control in adolescent substance use: Concurrent and longitudinal analyses.

Abstract: A sample of 9th-grade students (1,293 individuals, 51% girls) attending compulsory schools in Reykjavik, Iceland, was surveyed and followed up 3 years later. The relationship between perceived control and substance use is examined concurrently at age 14 for experimentation with tobacco and alcohol and longitudinally (14-17 years of age) for daily smoking, heavy drinking, and illicit drug use. Taking into account sociodemographic characteristics (family structure, socioeconomic status, and gender) and parental … Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…In the Amsterdam Growth and Health Study, adolescent self-sufficiency was associated with a reduced consumption of excessive alcohol an average of 14 years later, controlling for gender and age but not ill-being (Twisk, Snel, Kemper, & van Mechelen, 1998). In a study of Icelandic adolescents, perceived control was not related to heavy alcohol consumption 3 years later, adjusting for demographics and baseline substance use (although sense of control was associated with less risk of heavy drinking in cross-sectional analyses; Adalbjarnardottir & Rafnsson, 2001). In cross-sectional analyses, eudaimonic well-being is inversely associated with drinking problems generally (e.g., Marsh, Smith, Piek, & Saunders, 2003), although null findings have been reported for an association between mastery and heavy drinking or alcohol dependence (e.g., Prescott, Neale, Corey, & Kendler, 1997).…”
Section: Excessive Alcohol Consumption Eudaimonic Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the Amsterdam Growth and Health Study, adolescent self-sufficiency was associated with a reduced consumption of excessive alcohol an average of 14 years later, controlling for gender and age but not ill-being (Twisk, Snel, Kemper, & van Mechelen, 1998). In a study of Icelandic adolescents, perceived control was not related to heavy alcohol consumption 3 years later, adjusting for demographics and baseline substance use (although sense of control was associated with less risk of heavy drinking in cross-sectional analyses; Adalbjarnardottir & Rafnsson, 2001). In cross-sectional analyses, eudaimonic well-being is inversely associated with drinking problems generally (e.g., Marsh, Smith, Piek, & Saunders, 2003), although null findings have been reported for an association between mastery and heavy drinking or alcohol dependence (e.g., Prescott, Neale, Corey, & Kendler, 1997).…”
Section: Excessive Alcohol Consumption Eudaimonic Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Numerous studies have focused on alcohol-use patterns within the general population of adolescents and young adults, reporting a range of factors associated with increased use and misuse, including but not limited to: family history of alcohol misuse (Adalbjarnardottir & Rafnsson, 2001;Chassin, Pillow, Curran, Molina, & Barrera, 1993;Ellickson, Tucker, Klein, & McGuigan, 2001;Jackson, Henrickson, & Dickinson, 1999), enrollment in college, increased impulsivity/sensation seeking (Arnett, 2005;Raskin White & Jackson, 2004/2005, stressful life events (Wills, 1992), distress (Jackson & Sher, 2003), peer risk behaviors and norms (Andrews, Tildesley, Hops, & Li, 2002;Chassin et al, 1993;Li, Barrera, Hops, & Fisher, 2002;Musher-Eizenman, Holub, & Arnett, 2003), age of initiation (DeWit, Adlaf, Offord, & Ogborne, 2000;Ellickson et al, 2001;Hawkins et al, 1997), and ethnicity, with the highest rates reported by Caucasians (Raskin White & Jackson, 2004/2005.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Spol je važan moderator u objašnjavanju veze između lič-nosti i poremećaja vezanih uz PA (Adalbjarnardottir i Rafnsson, 2001.). Do 1990-ih godina većina istraživanja s područja ovisnosti provodila su se na uzorcima muškaraca, pa se i zaključci nisu mogli generalizirati za oba spola (Frances i Miller, 1998.).…”
Section: Uvodunclassified