Abstract

When estimating the association between peer and youth alcohol consumption, it is critical to account for possible differential levels of response to peer socialization processes across youth, in addition to variability in individual, family, and social factors. Failure to account for intrinsic differences in youth’s response to peers may pose a threat of selection bias. To address this issue, we used a propensity score stratification method to examine whether the size of the association between peer and youth drinking is contingent upon differential predicted probabilities of associating with alcohol-consuming friends. Analyzing a Chilean youth sample (N = 914) of substance use, we found that youths are susceptible to the detrimental role of peer drinkers, but the harmful relationship with one’s own drinking behavior may be exacerbated among youth who already have a high probability of socializing with peers who drink. In other words, computing a single weighted-average estimate for peer drinking would have underestimated the detrimental role of peers, particularly among at-risk youths, and overestimated the role of drinking peers among youths who are less susceptible to peer socialization processes. Heterogeneous patterns in the association between peer and youth drinking may shed light on social policies that target at-risk youths.

Highlights

  • Peer relationships have long been documented as a key factor in explaining youth drug-use and delinquency [1]

  • This study found that peers’ drinking behavior and youth’s own drinking behavior were significantly linked

  • The positive relationship between peer influence and the probability of having friends who consume alcohol suggests that the harmful role of drinking friends on an individual’s own drinking behavior may be exacerbated among youth who already have a high probability of socializing with them

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Summary

Introduction

Peer relationships have long been documented as a key factor in explaining youth drug-use and delinquency [1]. This is not surprising given that adolescence is a phase of the life course in which intimate peer relationships start to develop and are strengthened [2,3]. There is a broader category of peer groups that construct impersonal, yet powerful, norms of youth behavior [4] Whether it is through intimate interactions or overarching subculture, peers increasingly have a growing influence over youth’s behavior and beliefs from early adolescence. Adolescents are socialized by an array of peers; from those who provide a reference point to those who exert pressure for conformity to peer standards [5]

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