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Binge drinking in 14-year-old Italian students is correlated with low or high psychological well-being: a cross-sectional study

Authors :
Veronica A. De Angelis
Sara Gostoli
Sara Casadei
Chiara Rafanelli
Luana Fantini
Gostoli S.
Fantini L.
Casadei S.
De Angelis V.A.
Rafanelli C.
Source :
Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy. 28:190-199
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2020.

Abstract

Balanced levels of Psychological Well-Being (PWB) can represent protective factors for human functioning. PWB has not been investigated among young adolescents who practice binge drinking (BD), a popular pattern of alcohol intake, defined as the consumption of five or more alcoholic units in one session. The negative impact of BD on psychophysical health has been extensively studied, but there is scarcity of studies investigating the influence of psychological variables on BD in early adolescence. The main aim of this study was to fill the gap in the literature, focusing on PWB as a new possible target of preventive interventions. One thousand six hundred and eighty-seven Italian adolescents completed questionnaires assessing BD, cannabis use, lifestyle, allostatic overload, subclinical psychological distress, problem-solving, and PWB. Binge drinkers represented 9% of the sample. Among them, 71%, 26%, and 3% binge drank monthly, weekly, and daily, respectively. Stress (higher frequency of stressful life events), psychological distress (higher hostility), and PWB dimensions (higher scores on positive relations and lower on purpose in life) were associated with BD. These new findings on unbalanced levels of PWB could represent the potential target of longitudinal studies aimed to implement specific preventive interventions among young adolescents. Implications for research and prevention are discussed.

Details

ISSN :
14653370 and 09687637
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....739b00158a72400aab74e61d7992befa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/09687637.2020.1799942