Anxiety and severity of illicit substance use in adolescence: Evaluating the mediating role of perceived coping styles
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State: Public
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serval:BIB_926B767AB876
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Chapter: chapter ou part
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Publications
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Title
Anxiety and severity of illicit substance use in adolescence: Evaluating the mediating role of perceived coping styles
Title of the book
Handbook of the Psychology of Coping: New research
Publisher
New York: Nova Publishers
ISBN
978-1-62081-464-2
978-1-62081-465-9
978-1-62081-465-9
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2012
Editor
Molinelli B., Grimaldo V.
Pages
279-291
Language
english
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine whether coping styles (Active coping, Internal coping and Withdrawal coping) mediated the relationships between anxiety and severity of illicit substance use among a sample of 110 Swiss adolescents ages 12-19 (M=16.3, SD=1.66). The current study tested two competing models of anxiety on severity of illicit substance use. In the first model, we tested the direct effect of trait anxiety (STAI-Y anxiety score) on severity of illicit substance use (ADAD drug use severity rating), while in the second models we examined the mediating role of coping styles in the link between trait anxiety and severity of illicit substance use. Path models indicated that the associations between trait anxiety and severity of illicit substance use are partially mediated by active and withdrawal coping styles. Limitations of the findings and implications for prevention of substance use in adolescence are discussed.
Keywords
adolescence, anxiety, coping, substance use, mediation analysis
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Create date
05/10/2011 10:30
Last modification date
20/08/2019 14:55