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Journal Article

Citation

De Haan L, Thompson KM. J. Drug Educ. 2003; 33(4): 399-413.

Affiliation

Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49512, USA. ldehaan@calvin.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Baywood Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15237865

Abstract

The study examines alcohol-related attitudes among adolescents and adults in a high consumption community, exploring whether adolescents and adults hold similar or different views regarding adolescent drinking. Data were gathered from adults in a Midwestern city via random telephone survey of 487 adults (30% with children under the age of 21). Students in grades 6-12 (n = 558) also completed a youth version of the survey in classrooms. Results indicated that becoming a parent was associated with more restrictive attitudes about adolescent alcohol use, regardless of the age of their children. Adolescents aged 14 to 17 had the least restrictive attitudes. Adults aged 18 to 24 (who were not parents) reported values similar to older adolescents. Younger adolescents, while similar to older adolescents in perception of community alcohol problems, were more like parents and older adults in attitudes about adolescent drinking. Both adolescents and adults greatly overestimated actual amounts of community adolescent binge drinking.


Language: en

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