
@article{ref1,
title="&quot;Measuring university students' self-efficacy to use drinking self-control strategies&quot;: Correction to Bonar et al. (2011)",
journal="Psychology of addictive behaviors",
year="2011",
author="Bonar, Erin E. and Rosenberg, Harold and Hoffmann, Erica and Kraus, Shane W. and Kryszak, Elizabeth and Young, Kathleen M. and Ashrafioun, Lisham and Pavlick, Michelle and Bannon, Erin E.",
volume="25",
number="2",
pages="351-351",
abstract="Reports an error in &quot;Measuring university students' self-efficacy to use drinking self-control strategies&quot; by E. E. Bonar, et al. (Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 2011[Mar], Vol 25[1], 155-161). There is an error in Table 3. Item 8 in the table should have read: &quot;Start off with at least 1 nonalcoholic drink before you start drinking alcohol.&quot; (The following abstract of the original article appeared in record 2011-05934-004.) Using a Web-based, self-administered questionnaire, we assessed 498 university-student drinkers' self-efficacy to use 31 different behavioral strategies to reduce excessive drinking in each of three different locations (bar, party, own dorm/apartment). Averaging all 31 items within each drinking situation to create a single scale score revealed high internal consistency reliabilities and moderate inter-item correlations. Testing the association of self-efficacy with drinking location, sex, and frequency of recent binge drinking, we found that respondents reported higher self-efficacy to use these strategies when drinking in their own dorm/apartment than when drinking in bars and at parties; women reported higher mean self-efficacy than men; and drinkers who engaged in 3-or-more binges in the previous 2 weeks reported lower self-efficacy than those who reported either 0 or 1-or-2 binges in the same time period. This questionnaire could be used to identify self-efficacy deficits among clients with drinking problems and as an outcome measure to assess the degree to which interventions influence reported confidence to use specific drinking-reduction strategies in high-risk drinking situations. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2011 APA, all rights reserved).<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0893-164X",
doi="10.1037/a0023840",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0023840"
}