
@article{ref1,
title="Reasons for alcohol consumption among Japanese high school students overall and by sex and year in school: an exploratory study",
journal="Nihon Arukoru Yakubutsu Igakkai Zasshi",
year="2016",
author="Miyoshi, Yoshihiro and Katsuno, Shingo and Nishioka, Nobuki and Wada, Kiyoshi",
volume="51",
number="5",
pages="302-322",
abstract="This study sought to ascertain the association between alcohol consumption by Japanese high school students and their reasons for drinking. Monitoring the Future is a U.S. survey of substance abuse that features a core question that asks about reasons for drinking. This study translated that question into Japanese to survey 2,283 students (1,404 males and 879 females; 1,142 freshmen and 1,141 sophomores) at 3 Japanese high schools from November to December 2014. The original question had 15 possible answers, but 2 were eliminated and the answer &quot;I don't drink&quot; was added. Responses were analyzed overall and by sex and year. <br><br>RESULTS indicated that 9.4% of male students drank in the past 30 days, 28.4% drank in the past year, and 43.0% had drunk at some point in their lives. Similarly, 6.5% of female students drank in the past 30 days, 23.8% drank in the past year, and 36.7% had drunk at some point in their lives. Of the sample, 58.1% answered that they &quot;don't drink. &quot; Given reasons for drinking were &quot;because it tastes good&quot; (15.8%), &quot;to-experiment-to see what it's like&quot; (14.5%), &quot;to have a good time with my friends&quot; (14.1%), &quot;to relax or relieve tension&quot; (10.2%), &quot;to feel good or get high&quot; (7.9%), and &quot;to fit in with a group I like&quot; (5.2%). Respondents who drank in the past 30 days, in the past year, or at some point in their lives did so for different reasons. As alcohol consumption increased, respondents drank &quot;because it tastes good&quot; markedly more often. Reasons for drinking were ranked by frequency to compare Japanese high school students and U.S. 12th graders. Japanese students were more likely to drink &quot;to fit in with a group I like&quot; while U.S. students were more likely to drink &quot;because of boredom, nothing else to do.&quot;<p /> <p>Language: ja</p>",
language="ja",
issn="1341-8963",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}