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Journal Article

Citation

Williams RJ, Connor JP, Ricciardelli LA. J. Drug Educ. 1998; 28(4): 347-359.

Affiliation

Charles Stuart University, Bathurst, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Baywood Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10097484

Abstract

The present study examined the relative importance of outcome expectancies and self-efficacy [1] in the prediction of alcohol dependence [2] and alcohol consumption in a sample of young adult drinkers drawn from a milieu previously reported as supportive of risky drinking. In predicting alcohol dependence, outcome expectancies were found to mediate self-efficacy and the same pattern was found for both males and females. This suggests that male and female drinkers may become more similar as they progress along the drinking continuum from risky drinking to dependent drinking. However, in women, in comparison to men, a greater array of expectancies and self-efficacy scales were found to predict heavy drinking, as measured by quantity and frequency. These results suggest that heavy drinking women are particularly at risk of developing drinking related complications and that preventative education needs to take into account gender differences.


Language: en

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