TY - JOUR
T1 - Drinking Outcome Expectancies and Normative Perceptions of Students Engaged in University Sport in England
AU - Longstaff, Frances
AU - Heather, Nick
AU - Allsop, Susan
AU - Partington, Elizabeth
AU - Jankowski, Mark
AU - Wareham, Helen
AU - St Clair Gibson, Alan
AU - Partington, Sarah
N1 - © 2015 Human Kinetics, Inc. Accepted Manuscript version reprinted by permission from Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology, Vol. (1): 59-75, March 2015, doi: https://doi.org/10.1123/jcsp.2015-0005.
PY - 2015/3/1
Y1 - 2015/3/1
N2 - This study examined whether students engaged in university sport have different drinking outcome expectancies and normative beliefs than students who are not engaged in university sport. A cross-sectional survey of university students in England in 2008–2009 was undertaken. A questionnaire battery, including the Drinking Expectancies Questionnaire (DEQ) and a measure of normative beliefs, was completed by 770 students from seven universities across England. Responses from 638 students who were not abstaining from alcohol were analyzed. Students engaged in university sport have significantly higher drinking expectancies of assertion compared with students not engaged in university sport. Moreover, students engaged in university sport consistently report higher personal alcohol consumption and higher perceptions of consumption in those around them than students not engaged in university sport. Both assertion and the perception that students around them drink heavily provide only a partial explanation for why students engaged in university sport drink more than those not engaged in university sport. Further research is required to identify the reasons for heavy drinking among students involved in university sport in England.
AB - This study examined whether students engaged in university sport have different drinking outcome expectancies and normative beliefs than students who are not engaged in university sport. A cross-sectional survey of university students in England in 2008–2009 was undertaken. A questionnaire battery, including the Drinking Expectancies Questionnaire (DEQ) and a measure of normative beliefs, was completed by 770 students from seven universities across England. Responses from 638 students who were not abstaining from alcohol were analyzed. Students engaged in university sport have significantly higher drinking expectancies of assertion compared with students not engaged in university sport. Moreover, students engaged in university sport consistently report higher personal alcohol consumption and higher perceptions of consumption in those around them than students not engaged in university sport. Both assertion and the perception that students around them drink heavily provide only a partial explanation for why students engaged in university sport drink more than those not engaged in university sport. Further research is required to identify the reasons for heavy drinking among students involved in university sport in England.
U2 - 10.1123/jcsp.2015-0005
DO - 10.1123/jcsp.2015-0005
M3 - Article
SN - 1932-927X
VL - 9
SP - 59
EP - 75
JO - Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology
JF - Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology
IS - 1
ER -