9 research outputs found
An Exploratory Approach to Analyzing Alcohol Control Policy Opinions Held by Ontario Adults
Telephone interview data from a representative sample of 1,216 Ontario adults were analyzed using latent class analysis to determine whether distinct and homogeneous classes of individuals could be identified based on their responding patterns to 11 alcohol policy items. Five latent classes were identified and labeled as: dedicated liberalizers, moderate liberalizers, moderate controllers, dedicated controllers, and an ambivalent class. Multinomial regression analysis indicated that demographic and alcohol factors differentiated the classes. Those most opposed to alcohol controls, dedicated liberalizers, were more likely to be male, younger and heavier drinkers. Given their young age it is possible that further erosion of public support for alcohol controls may be expected
A typological study of gambling and substance use among adolescent students
Abstract Cluster analysis was used to define subpopulations of youth involved in drugs, alcohol, and gambling. Data from a 2001 cross-sectional survey of Ontario grade 7 to 13 students (N = 2,243; mean age 15 years; 51% males) were examined. The analysis suggested four clusters: Mainstreamers (66.0%), Party Goers (26.2%), Drug Takers (5.9%), and Heavy Gamblers (1.9%). This cluster structure was validated across a number of additional external variables that were not used in the original cluster analysis. The findings indicated that Drug Takers and Heavy Gamblers formed two distinct clusters. Probable pathological gamblers were found in all four clusters, but they were most concentrated in the heavy gambling cluster. The results suggest that troubled youths are not a single entity, but display heterogeneity in their configuration of risk behaviours
Ontario Youth Gambling Report: Data from the 2009 Ontario Student Drug Use and Health Survey
Permission granted to archive report in repository by Shawn Yu, Assistant Manager of Communications and Online Services, Problem Gambling Institute of Ontario.This report describes gambling activity and gambling problems among Ontario students in 2009, and also examines the relationship between gambling problems and substance use problems, mental health problems, and delinquent behaviours.YesReport Prepared for the Problem Gambling Institute of Ontari
Bullying and Hazardous Driving Among Youthful Drivers (letter to the editor)
Reproduced with permission of the Canadian Public Health Association.Bullying in schools is an important social, psychological and educational
problem. Research on this behaviour is available from
diverse countries. Reported rates of students being bullied range
from 10% to 50%. A recent Ontario study found that 20.7% of
students engaged in bullying.
Bullying behaviour is a marker for antisocial development. Perpetrators
engage in antisocial behaviour later in life, and have
higher levels of criminal thinking, aggression and psychopathology. More research is needed on how bullying relates to aggressive
behaviours outside of school situations.
Hazardous driving, including driving after drinking and drug use,
and street racing, are aggressive in nature. Several characteristics of
bullies are shared with hazardous drivers, e.g., being male, consuming
alcohol, and engaging in other antisocial behaviours. However,
no studies show how bullying relates to hazardous driving.
Here, we report associations between self-reported bullying perpetration
and hazardous driving in a large, representative sample of
students in Canadian schools