The relation between adolescent alcohol use and peer alcohol use: a longitudinal random coefficients model.

P J Curran, E Stice, L Chassin
Author Information
  1. P J Curran: Department of Psychology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708-0085, USA. curran@duke.edu

Abstract

Longitudinal latent growth models were used to examine the relation between changes in adolescent alcohol use and changes in peer alcohol use over a 3-year period in a community-based sample of 363 Hispanic and Caucasian adolescents. Both adolescent alcohol use and peer alcohol use were characterized by positive linear growth over time. Not only were changes in adolescent alcohol use closely related to changes in peer alcohol use, but the initial status on peer alcohol use was predictive of later increases in adolescent alcohol use and the initial status on adolescent alcohol use was predictive of later increases in peer alcohol use. These results are inconsistent with models positing solely unidirectional effects between adolescent alcohol use and peer alcohol use.

Grants

  1. AA05402/NIAAA NIH HHS
  2. DA05227/NIDA NIH HHS
  3. DA05643/NIDA NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior
Alcohol Drinking
Arizona
Chi-Square Distribution
Child
Cross-Sectional Studies
Factor Analysis, Statistical
Female
Humans
Male
Models, Psychological
Peer Group
Personality Development
Prospective Studies
Regression Analysis

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0alcoholuseadolescentpeerchangesgrowthmodelsrelationinitialstatuspredictivelaterincreasesLongitudinallatentusedexamine3-yearperiodcommunity-basedsample363HispanicCaucasianadolescentscharacterizedpositivelineartimecloselyrelatedresultsinconsistentpositingsolelyunidirectionaleffectsuse:longitudinalrandomcoefficientsmodel

Similar Articles

Cited By