Alcohol use and nicotine use were investigated in a representative
sample of 1110 study
participants aged 10 to 17 years. In addition to questions on substance
use, the participants
responded to questionnaires covering behavior and emotions, life events,
self-related
cognitions, coping capacities, perceived parental behavior, perceived school
environment,
and the social network. The gender gap in substance use tended to close
with increasing age.
Parental substance use served as a model for substance use in the participants.
Substance
users had more abnormal scores on almost all variables as compared to abstaining
controls.
Lack of acceptance and control, pressure to achieve at school, and life
events significantly
predicted substance use. The latter served as a moderating risk variable
for delinquent
behavior under stress.