info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Perceived Risk and Social Norms Associated with Alcohol, Tobacco, and Marijuana Use in Argentinean Teenagers
Fecha
2021-11Registro en:
Pilatti, Angelina; Kuntsche, Emmanuel; Acosta, Belén; Díaz, Jorge; Caneto, Florencia; et al.; Perceived Risk and Social Norms Associated with Alcohol, Tobacco, and Marijuana Use in Argentinean Teenagers; Springer; International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction; 2021; 11-2021; 1-17
1557-1874
1557-1882
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Pilatti, Angelina
Kuntsche, Emmanuel
Acosta, Belén
Díaz, Jorge
Caneto, Florencia
Pautassi, Ricardo Marcos
Resumen
This study examined the association of social norms (i.e., descriptive and injunctive norms) and perceived risk with alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana use in a sample of 378 Argentinean adolescents (60.3% girls, mean age 15.26 [SD = 1.26]). We conducted descriptive, correlation, and multivariate (i.e., hierarchical regression) analyses to describe substance use and examine the association of social norms and perceived risk with the frequency of heavy episodic drinking, tobacco, and marijuana. Perceived risk, injunctive norms, and descriptive peer norms were associated with frequency of substance use. Parental, but not peer, injunctive norms were associated with heavy alcohol use while peer injunctive norms were associated with tobacco and marijuana use. Findings suggest that increasing parent’s disapproval of substance use, reducing biases on descriptive and injunctive social norms on substance use, or increasing the perceived risk associated with such use may be valuable potential targets in interventions to reduce/prevent underage substance use.