SELF-REPORTED DRINKING AND ALCOHOL-RELATED PROBLEMS AMONG EARLY ADOLESCENTS - DIMENSIONALITY AND VALIDITY OVER 24 MONTHS

被引:195
|
作者
SMITH, GT
MCCARTHY, DM
GOLDMAN, MS
机构
[1] Department of Psychology, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL
来源
JOURNAL OF STUDIES ON ALCOHOL | 1995年 / 56卷 / 04期
关键词
D O I
10.15288/jsa.1995.56.383
中图分类号
R194 [卫生标准、卫生检查、医药管理];
学科分类号
摘要
Objective: Researchers rely on adolescents' self-reports of alcohol consumption and alcohol-related problems, despite little evidence concerning their validity. We assessed the reliability and validity of adolescents' self-reports, employing collateral validation and focusing on the understudied transitional years of early adolescence. Method: Subjects were 214 boys and 247 girls who participated in school-wide surveys that assessed drinking, drunkenness and alcohol-related problems each year for 3 years. These measures were validated by collateral (peer) reports and by separate, 7-day drinking calendars. Internal consistency and test-retest reliability were also assessed. Results: Results replicated findings with older adolescents that drinking/drunkenness and alcohol-related problems fall on two partially overlapping dimensions. Scales assessing each dimension had moderate to high internal consistency and high test-retest stability. Correlations with collateral reports were relatively strong for the drinking/drunkenness scale, moderate for a dichotomous variable reflecting the presence or absence of alcohol-related problems, and more modest for the alcohol-related problems scale. Correlations with diary reports of drinking behavior were strong for drinking/drunkenness. Results generally replicated across gender and over time. Conclusions: Researchers can have some confidence in the reliability and validity of early adolescents' survey self-reports, particularly of alcohol consumption (alcohol-related problems occurred with low base rates, perhaps limiting validity coefficients). Because drinking/drunkenness and alcohol-related problems shared 30% of their variance, factors other than consumption (e.g., personality factors) apparently influenced the experience of alcohol-related problems.
引用
收藏
页码:383 / 394
页数:12
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