Drug and Alcohol Dependence
Volume 86, Issue 1 , Pages 67-74, 5 January 2007

Psychosocial correlates of substance use in adolescence: A cross-national study in six European countries

  • Anna Kokkevi

      Affiliations

    • Department of Psychiatry, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece
    • University Mental Health Research Institute (UMHRI), Soranou tou Efesiou 2, P.O. Box 66 517, 156 01 Papagou, Athens, Greece
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +30 210 6536902; fax: +30 210 6537273.
  • ,
  • Clive Richardson

      Affiliations

    • Panteion University, Athens, Greece
    • UMHRI, Greece
  • ,
  • Silvia Florescu

      Affiliations

    • National Institute for Research and Development in Health (INCDS), Bucharest, Romania
  • ,
  • Marina Kuzman

      Affiliations

    • Croatian National Institute of Public Health, Zagreb, Croatia
  • ,
  • Eva Stergar

      Affiliations

    • Clinical Institute of Occupation, Traffic and Sports Medicine, Ljubljana, Slovenia

Received 3 August 2005; received in revised form 4 April 2006; accepted 14 May 2006.

Abstract 

Aims: To examine the psychosocial correlates of substance use among adolescents in six European countries. Design: Cross-sectional school population survey (ESPAD) based on standardized methodological procedures. Setting: High schools in six European countries: Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Romania, Slovenia and UK. Participants: Representative samples of a total sample of 16,445 high school students whose 16th birthday fell in the year of data collection. Measurements: Anonymous self-administered questionnaire. Self-reported substance use was measured by core items on tobacco, alcohol, marijuana and any illegal drug use. Psychosocial correlates included scales of self-esteem, depression, anomie and antisocial behavior, and items pertaining to family, school and peers. Findings: Logistic regression analyses for each potential correlate adjusted for country, taking into account the clustered sample, showed statistically significant associations with each substance use variable separately, in almost every case. Particularly strong associations were found between smoking and going out most evenings and having many friends who smoke, while cannabis and illegal drugs were strongly correlated with having friends or older siblings who used these substances. The self-esteem scale score was not correlated with substance use. Anomie and antisocial behavior were more strongly associated than depression with substance use. In the case of depression, anomie and most of the other items examined, associations were stronger for girls than for boys. Conclusion: The present cross-national study identified correlates of legal and illegal substance use which extend outside specific countries, providing grounds to believe that they can be generalized. They provide evidence for the need to address both the use of the gateway drugs and deviant behavior in conjunction with environmental risk factors when designing and implementing preventive interventions in schools.

Keywords: Tobacco, Alcohol, Illegal drug use, Psychosocial correlates, Adolescents, School survey, Cross-national European study, ESPAD

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PII: S0376-8716(06)00202-X

doi:10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2006.05.018

Drug and Alcohol Dependence
Volume 86, Issue 1 , Pages 67-74, 5 January 2007