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Journal Article

Citation

Victoir A, Eertmans A, Van den Bergh O, Van den Broucke S. Health Educ. Res. 2007; 22(1): 81-94.

Affiliation

Research Group for Stress, Health, Well-being, University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium. An.Victoir@psy.kuleuven.be

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/her/cyl050

PMID

16807377

Abstract

In two samples of Flemish secondary school students, co-occurrence of different types of substance use was observed: smoking was associated with marijuana use in Sample 1 (n = 597) and alcohol consumption in Sample 2 (n = 403). It was investigated whether social-cognitive determinants of these behaviours were also associated. Low to medium correlations were observed. Confirmatory factor analyses showed that a model with general social-cognitive factors (across different substances) did not have adequate fit. Substance use was mainly associated with variables referring to the specific substance under consideration, with the exception of self-efficacy in buying and smoking cigarettes; this factor was linked not only to smoking but also to alcohol and marijuana use. Adolescents who regularly used two substances generally held positions on social-cognitive scales that were more unfavourable than those who only used one substance. In order to change determinants of use, substance-specific cognitions and skills may be important targets.


Language: en

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