PMID: 8952188Nov 1, 1996Paper

Coping strategies, drinking motives, and stressful life events among middle adolescents: associations with emotional and behavioral problems and with academic functioning

Journal of Abnormal Psychology
M Windle, R C Windle

Abstract

A sample of 733 middle adolescents was used to study interrelations among coping strategies, drinking motives, stressful life events (major, daily positive, and daily negative), emotional and behavioral problems, and academic functioning. A main-effects (vs. stress-buffering) model was supported. Some predictors (e.g., task-oriented coping, major stressful events) were general in their predictive relations to the outcome variables, whereas others were highly specific (e.g., emotion-focused coping predicting depressed affect). Overall, the predictors accounted for 22-53% of the variance in regression equations. Positive daily events predicted higher levels of alcohol use, alcohol problems, and delinquent activity; as well as higher academic performance and lower levels of depressed affect.

Citations

Feb 12, 2005·Development and Psychopathology·Andrea M Hussong, Laurie Chassin
Aug 19, 2009·Journal of Abnormal Psychology·Kevin M KingLaurie Chassin
Feb 10, 2010·Journal of Abnormal Psychology·Andrew K LittlefieldPhillip K Wood
Sep 18, 2013·Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology·Niwako SugimuraAnna M Agoston
Nov 30, 2013·Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders·Chien-Yu HuangKuan-Lin Chen
Feb 6, 2020·Stress : the International Journal on the Biology of Stress·Marleen G GroeneveldHarriet J Vermeer
Dec 31, 1997·Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, and Allied Disciplines·R C Windle, M Windle
May 26, 2017·Anxiety, Stress, and Coping·Ilgın Gökler DanIşmanİbrahim Yiğit
Jul 2, 2003·Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, and Allied Disciplines·Hans-Christoph Steinhausen, Christa Winkler Metzke
Apr 29, 2004·Alcoholism, Clinical and Experimental Research·Vivian B FadenKenneth J Sher
Nov 9, 2005·Journal of Personality·Stephen ArmeliCynthia Mohr

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