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The association between an abusive father-son relationship, quantity of alcohol consumption, and male-to-male alcohol-related agression
journal contribution
posted on 2013-09-01, 00:00 authored by Peter MillerPeter Miller, J Hargreaves, Ashlee CurtisAshlee Curtis, Lucille ZinkiewiczBackground:
While alcohol consumption and heavy episodic (binge) drinking are well-established predictors of male-to-male alcohol-related aggression (MMARA), the role of the father-son relationship in MMARA has yet to be explored.
Methods:
This study therefore examined whether fathering by the biological father rather than another father figure, negative fathering, and gender role modeled by the father figure were significant predictors of involvement in MMARA, once drinking frequency and quantity and heavy episodic drinking were controlled for. A total of 121 university students aged 18 to 25 years (M = 20.63, SD = 1.77 years) voluntarily completed the online questionnaire.
Results:
The only significant predictors of perpetration of MMARA were a more abusive paternal relationship and drinking quantity (number of standard drinks usually consumed when drinking).
Conclusions:
Negative father-son relationships may play a role in fostering young men's perpetration of MMARA in the barroom context. © 2013 by the Research Society on Alcoholism.
While alcohol consumption and heavy episodic (binge) drinking are well-established predictors of male-to-male alcohol-related aggression (MMARA), the role of the father-son relationship in MMARA has yet to be explored.
Methods:
This study therefore examined whether fathering by the biological father rather than another father figure, negative fathering, and gender role modeled by the father figure were significant predictors of involvement in MMARA, once drinking frequency and quantity and heavy episodic drinking were controlled for. A total of 121 university students aged 18 to 25 years (M = 20.63, SD = 1.77 years) voluntarily completed the online questionnaire.
Results:
The only significant predictors of perpetration of MMARA were a more abusive paternal relationship and drinking quantity (number of standard drinks usually consumed when drinking).
Conclusions:
Negative father-son relationships may play a role in fostering young men's perpetration of MMARA in the barroom context. © 2013 by the Research Society on Alcoholism.
History
Journal
Alcoholism: clinical and experimental researchVolume
37Issue
9Pagination
1571 - 1576Publisher
Wiley - Blackwell PublishingLocation
Chichester, EnglandPublisher DOI
ISSN
1530-0277eISSN
0145-6008Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalUsage metrics
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