Reputations, self-concepts and coping strategies of volatile solvent users.

J Drug Educ

Graduate School of Education, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, Perth, Western Australia.

Published: January 1999

Data pertaining to the reputations, self-concepts and coping strategies of thirty-one secondary school Volatile Solvent Users (VSUs), forty-four ex-VSUs, and forty-eight non-VSUs in the Perth Metropolitan area of Western Australia were obtained using the High School Student Activity Questionnaire. Findings revealed that significant differences between current VSUs, ex-VSUs, and non-VSUs were more attributable to factors of reputation enhancement than to factors of either self-concept or coping strategies. Current VSUs identified themselves as both having and wanting to have a more non-confronting reputation, and as admiring drug-related activities significantly more than both ex-VSUs and non-VSUs. Two coping variables were also found to be significant indicating that females use more non-productive coping strategies and external coping strategies than males. No interaction effects were identified. The implications for drug education and further research are discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/6FUR-7X21-97EX-P36NDOI Listing

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