Short form of a situational temptation scale for heavy, episodic drinking
Document Type
Article
Date of Original Version
1-1-2000
Abstract
Purpose: A short form for situational temptations to drink scale was developed from an original 21-item inventory by Migneault. Methods: The form measured four hypothesized subscales of temptations on a sample of 348 college drinkers (66% female). Peer pressure, social anxiety, negative affect, and positive/social situations subscales were replicated and reduced. Results: Strong empirical support was found for a hierarchical model, indicating that the four subscales can be summed to provide a global measure of situational temptations. Confirmatory factor results, internal and external validity, and high correlations with the original measures indicate that the short form was as psychometrically valid as the original measure. Implications: Measures of external validity demonstrated the applicability of this measure to heavy drinking prevention programs.
Publication Title, e.g., Journal
Journal of Substance Abuse
Volume
11
Issue
3
Citation/Publisher Attribution
Maddock, Jason E., Robert G. Laforge, and Joseph S. Rossi. "Short form of a situational temptation scale for heavy, episodic drinking." Journal of Substance Abuse 11, 3 (2000): 281-288. doi: 10.1016/S0899-3289(00)00027-4.