Lecture 11 Alcohol use and delinquency
Intro
Under the influence of alcohol, youth are at higher risk to be involved in aggressive behavior and violent behaviors.
Part 1 – alcohol use and delinquency
Do the Dutch drink?
Underage drinking
13 years old > monthly drinking = 8.8%
15 year old drinkers > binge drinking = 70.8%
Are they delinquent?
Self-reported criminal behavior (at least one delinquent act in the last 12 months):
12-17 year
2010: 38%
2015: 35%
10/11 year old
2010/2015: 20%
Most prevalent delinquent acts:
Violence acts
Threatening
Vandalism
Registered minor suspects:
50% fewer registered minor suspects in 10 year
Part 2 – Similarities and differences between alcohol use and delinquency
Shared similarities
Interrelated
Correlated and co-occurrence
Table: number of offenses and prevalence rate of different drinking behaviors. Those adolescents who were not involved in any offense, half of them had drunk alcohol at least once in their life. Number of kids that had been involved in lifetime drinking, increases in amount of offenses
Longitudinal predictions: most studies find no predictive effect of alcohol use on delinquency, whereas delinquency mostly is a significant predictor of alcohol use
Peak in adolescence
Predictor of other risk behaviors (e.g., drug use, risky sex)
Shared underlying mechanisms (e.g., self-control, peers)
Importance of parental control and warmth
Decline in recent years
decline started from 2006/2007 onwards
Registered minor suspects: also a decline starting from 2006/2007
What is going on there?
Differences
Development
Alcohol use: increases up to at least 25 years
Delinquency: decline 18 year onwards
Across gender
Alcohol use: hardly any differences between boys and girls
Delinquency: boys are more likely to be involved in delinquent behavior than girls
Representation ethnic minorities
Alcohol use: less likely to drink
Delinquency: more likely to be involved
Behavior-specific vs general parenting
Age restriction
Alcohol-specific rules/communication
Delinquency: general parenting
No age restriction
Level of control and support are important in both parenting behaviors
Four different parenting styles
Neglectful: these kids are most likely to drink and engage in risky behaviors
Balance between control and support – alcohol use
Most of the parents in authoritative/average authoritative group
From a lot rules to less rules
High quality of communication
Authoritative parents are more likely to communicate often
Authoritarian
Strict at age 12, decline steeply
Quality of communication is low
Decliners
Strict at age 12, but they decline very steeply over time
Quality of communication is average
Permissive
Permissive at age 12, more permissive over time
Quality of communication below average
Parents are the once's who provide the first drink. But they don't teach their children how to steal.
Children are more likely to drink with parents. When they become older, they drink more often with peers
Part 3 – Prevention of alcohol use in students (PAS) (intervention)
The intervention targeted on both the adolescent as the parents
Parent intervention
Aim: strict parenting (rules and attitudes about alcohol)
Presentation at parents meeting (3x)
first parents meeting new schoolyear
Brief: 15 minutes
Consensus building parents
parents talked about rules
Information leaflet
Student intervention
Aim: increase self-control and healthy attitudes about alcohol
Four digital interactive lessons (e-learning) in class
interactive assignments
Individual and group
Attractive lay-out
Hard-copy booster in year two
Study design
Sample: early adolescence (12-16 years)
Entry secondary school
Legal drinking age
Self-report at 5 timepoints
Significant difference between combine intervention and control group (weekly drinking)
Heavy weekly drinking at age 16: only a significant effect of the combined intervention
Conclusion: adolescents and parents should be targeted
How? And among whom does it work?
Student intervention:
Mediators: self-control and attitude about alcohol
Parent intervention:
self-control, rules about alcohol and attitude about alcohol
Do these behaviors influence the alcohol use? Yes!
Increase in self-control, rules and attitude
Combined intervention lowered level of drinking at age 16. This effect was achieved through weekly drinking at age 15. The onset of heavy weekly drinking was influenced by rules and self-control
Part 4 – What about delinquency?
Delinquency
40-50% of delinquent offenders has a substance addiction
Substance addiction is a contra-indication of delinquency treatment
Externalizing behavior
Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire
subscale: conduct behavior > fights, lies, steels, disobey, tantrum
As a moderator
have specific groups more benefits?
As an outcome
what is the effect of the PAS intervention on externalizing behaviors?
Moderator
RQ: is the alcohol intervention differentially effective for adolescents with low/high externalizing at age 12?
Combined intervention more effective in adolescents with externalizing behavior
Outcome
Research question: is the alcohol intervention effective in curbin adolescents’ externalizing behaviors?
Externalizing behavior age 12, 13, 14, 15
Combined intervention: externalizing behavior decreases over time
Parent intervention and student intervention develop in a similar way
Conclusion
Combined PAS intervention effectively
postpones the onset of (heavy) weekly drinking up to age 16
Curbs the development of externalizing behaviors up to age 15
Particularly in adolescents with externalizing behaviors at age 12
Thus
Different from and in addition to current state of knowledge
Interrelated, longitudinal predictions
Experimental study: later drinking also influences the level of delinquency
Discussion
How does this happen?
two hypothesis:
Underlying mechanisms (increase in self-control and alcohol-specific rules) result in lower rates of externalizing behavior
Delayed alcohol initiation leads to less externalizing behaviors
What happened in 2006/2007?
social media hypothesis?
Social media as another platform to meet the needs of adolescents (recognition by peers, entertainment)
Shift from offline to online delinquency
Changing social cultural attitude hypothesis?
Changing attitudes of youth and parents towards risk behavior
More protective factors (monitoring/solicitation) and less risk factors (exposure to risky peers)
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Adolescence Development - Lectures - Universiteit Utrecht
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