Generic placeholder image

Current Drug Abuse Reviews

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1874-4737
ISSN (Online): 1874-4745

Incorporating Coping into an Expectancy Framework for Explaining Drinking Behaviour

Author(s): Penelope A. Hasking and Tian P.S. Oei

Volume 1, Issue 1, 2008

Page: [20 - 35] Pages: 16

DOI: 10.2174/1874473710801010020

Abstract

Expectancy Theory has offered much in the way of understanding alcohol use and abuse, and has contributed greatly to prevention and treatment initiatives. However although many cognitive-behavioural treatment approaches are based on expectancy constructs, such as outcome expectancies and self-efficacy, high relapse rates imply that expectancy theory may be too narrow in scope, and that additional variables need to be examined if a comprehensive understanding of drinking behaviour, and better treatment outcomes, are to be achieved. We suggest that the coping strategies an individual employs present one such set of variables that have largely been neglected from an expectancy framework. Although coping skills training is routinely used in prevention and treatment of alcohol problems, coping research has suffered from a poor theoretical framework. In this paper we review the existing research relating expectancies, self-efficacy and coping to drinking behaviour and propose a model which explains both social and dependent drinking, by incorporating coping into an expectancy theory framework. We also outline research and clinical implications of the proposed model.

Keywords: Drinking behaviour, alcohol expectancies, self-efficacy, coping


© 2024 Bentham Science Publishers | Privacy Policy