Sense of coherence and substance use in Spanish adolescents. Does the effect of SOC depend on patterns of substance use in their peer group?

Authors

  • Irene García-Moya Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology. University of Seville. Departmento de Psicología Evolutiva y de la Educación. Universidad de Sevilla Calle Camilo José Cela, s/n - 41018 Sevilla
  • Antonia Jiménez-Iglesias Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology. University of Seville.
  • Carmen Moreno Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology. University of Seville.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.20882/adicciones.58

Keywords:

sense of coherence, adolescence, peers’ patterns of substance use, tobacco use, alcohol use

Abstract

The aims of this work were to analyse the relationships between sense ofcoherence (SOC) and substance use among Spanish adolescents and toexamine the potential moderator effect of the patterns of substance usein the peer group. Sample consisted of 5475 Spanish adolescents aged 15 to 18 from the 2010 edition of the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) study. Statistical analysis included cluster analysis to identify groups of adolescents according to their peer group’s patternsof substance use and logistic regression with SOC and peers’ pattern of consumption as predictors of current tobacco use, current alcohol use,life-time drunkenness and current drunkenness. The results showed that a strong SOC seemed to reduce the adolescents’ likelihood of involving in tobacco use and drunkenness, but it was not associated with being a current drinker. In addition, the protective effect of SOC was moderated by peers’ patterns of substance use. Specifically, SOC had a significant protective influence in adolescents whose peer group showed either a nonconsumption pattern or a pattern of frequent alcohol use and occasionaldrunkenness; but the protective effect of SOC disappeared if peers showeda pattern of consumption that included illegal drugs. In conclusion, SOCtends to act as a protective personal variable with respect to substance useduring adolescence, but the influence exerted by the peer group seems tomoderate the aforementioned protective effect of SOC.

References

Landis, J. R., & Koch, G. G. (1977). The measurement of observer

agreement for categorical data. Biometrics, 33, 159-174.

Published

2013-06-01

Issue

Section

Originals