Publication year
2005Number of pages
21 p.
Source
Clinical Psychology Review, 25, 7, (2005), pp. 841-861ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ BSI OGG
Journal title
Clinical Psychology Review
Volume
vol. 25
Issue
iss. 7
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 841
Page end
p. 861
Subject
Developmental PsychopathologyAbstract
This article reviews evidence of adolescent and young adult drinking motives and their relation to possible consequences over the last 15 years. To this end, a computer-assisted search of relevant articles was conducted. Results revealed that most young people reported drinking for social motives, some indicated enhancement motives, and only a few reported coping motives. Social motives appear to be associated with moderate alcohol use, enhancement with heavy drinking, and coping motives with alcohol-related problems. However, an enormous heterogeneity was found in terms of how motives were measured: 10 to 40 items were grouped into between 2 and 10 dimensions and sometimes the same items occurred under different dimensions. Future studies should therefore use well-defined, theoretically based, homogenous instruments to disentangle cultural from measurement differences across surveys.
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- Faculty of Social Sciences [29104]
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