A cross-national study on adolescent substance use: Intentions, peer substance use, and parent-adolescent communication

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Abstract

This longitudinal two-wave cross-national study investigated whether intentions, friends' substance use, and parent-adolescent substance-use specific communication predict adolescent alcohol and cannabis use 1 year later, while estimating reversed links. The temporal order between these two substances was also examined. We used multi-group cross-lagged panel modeling on data from 2 ethnically and socioeconomically diverse samples: Sint Maarten (N = 350; Mage = 14.19) and the Netherlands (N = 602; Mage = 13.50). Results showed that in the Netherlands, cannabis use predicts more subsequent problems (alcohol use, intention to use cannabis, and affiliation with cannabis-using friends). But for Sint Maarten, alcohol use predicts more subsequent problems (cannabis use, intention to use alcohol, and affiliation with alcohol-using friends). These opposing results demonstrate that caution is warranted when generalizing results across countries.

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APA

Defoe, I. N., Dubas, J. S., & van Aken, M. A. G. (2023). A cross-national study on adolescent substance use: Intentions, peer substance use, and parent-adolescent communication. Journal of Research on Adolescence, 33(2), 641–655. https://doi.org/10.1111/jora.12832

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