Sj. Cummings et Ja. Griffin, Identifying offspring of problem-drinking parents: Comparison of five self-report measures, SUBST USE M, 34(13), 1999, pp. 1817-1836
Citations number
57
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science","Clinical Psycology & Psychiatry
Although there is general consensus that self-report measures are reliable
in offspring identification of parental problem drinking, studies in which
these measures are used differ in two important ways: 1) different self-rep
ort measures are used across investigations, and 2) when identical measures
are used, idiosyncratic cutoff criteria are employed. The purpose of this
study was to compare five self-report measures commonly used in college-age
populations to identify problem-drinking parents. When the most conservati
ve criterion was employed, each of the five measures identified similar per
centages of offspring as having problem-drinking parents (10% for fathers a
nd 4% for mothers). Interrelationships among the five measures were examine
d, and each method appeared to contribute both to the common and unique var
iance of the construct "parental problem drinking." Therefore no one measur
e can capture all aspects of a parent's drinking problem as reported by the
ir offspring.