Résumés
Résumé
Contexte : Il importe de comprendre les croyances entourant la consommation d’alcool afin de contribuer à diminuer les problèmes associés à cette problématique.
Objectif : Réaliser une synthèse des connaissances sur les croyances entourant la consommation d’alcool dans la population générale en Occident entre 2008 et 2020.
Cadre théorique : Le modèle intégré du comportement (MIC) offre un fondement pour conceptualiser et identifier les facteurs qui influencent les comportements relatifs à la santé. Il représente un cadre théorique pertinent pour mieux appréhender la réalité entourant la consommation d’alcool.
Méthode : L’étude de portée a été choisie comme méthode de synthèse des connaissances. Les bases de données Health Policy Research Center, Medline, Psychology & Behavioral Sciences, PsycINFO et SocINDEX ont été interrogées avec une série de mots-clés sur les croyances et la consommation d’alcool. Au total, 107 articles ont été retenus. Une analyse quantitative descriptive et une analyse qualitative thématique ont permis de synthétiser les résultats.
Résultats : La majorité des articles proviennent des États-Unis (n=49), du Royaume-Uni (n=18) et de l’Australie (n=15). Les thèmes qui se dégagent de l’analyse qualitative des articles retenus s’insèrent dans les croyances proposées par le MIC, soit les croyances liées aux émotions, les croyances à propos des effets et des conséquences de l’alcool, les croyances normatives et les croyances face au sentiment de contrôle. Il ressort de cela que les croyances entourant la consommation d’alcool ont une influence importante sur les comportements de consommation d’alcool. Les résultats illustrent que ces croyances sont complexes, variées et influencées par de nombreux facteurs individuels et sociaux comme l’âge, les habitudes de consommation, les normes culturelles et de genre.
Conclusion : Le portrait des croyances entourant la consommation d’alcool peut éclairer la pratique, la recherche et l’élaboration de politiques de prévention.
Mots-clés :
- croyances,
- alcool,
- étude de portée
Abstract
Context: Alcohol consumption is associated with more than 200 health problems. To help reduce alcohol consumption in the general population and its negative consequences, it is important to understand the beliefs surrounding alcohol use.
Objective: Conduct a synthesis of the literature on beliefs surrounding alcohol consumption in the general population among Western societies between 2008 and 2020.
Theorical framework: The Integrated Model of Behavior (IMB) provides a foundation for conceptualizing and identifying the factors that influence health-related behaviors. It represents a relevant theoretical framework for better understanding the reality surrounding alcohol consumption.
Methods: The scoping review was selected for this knowledge synthesis. Databases including The Health Policy Research Center, Medline, Psychology & Behavioral Sciences, PsycINFO and SocINDEX were surveyed with a series of key words about beliefs and alcohol consumption. A total of 107 articles were retained. Descriptive quantitative analysis and thematic qualitative analysis were used to synthesize the articles.
Results: The majority of articles came from the United States (n=49), the United Kingdom (n=18) and Australia (n=15). Themes from the qualitative analysis fit in four beliefs coming form the IMB, which are emotional beliefs, behavioral beliefs, normative beliefs and beliefs about control. Results shows that beliefs about alcohol have a significant influence on drinking behaviour. These beliefs are complex, varied and are influenced by many individual and social factors such as age, gender, consumption habits and cultural and gender norms.
Conclusion: This overview of beliefs about alcohol consumption can inform practice, research, and policy development. Understanding these beliefs may help the implementation of preventive actions to influence behaviours.
Keywords:
- beliefs,
- alcohol,
- scoping review
Resumen
Contexto: es importante comprender que las creencias en torno al consumo de alcohol para contribuir con la disminución de los problemas relacionados con el consumo de alcohol.
Objetivo: llevar a cabo una síntesis de los conocimientos sobre las creencias en torno al consumo de alcohol en la población en general en Occidente entre 2008 y 2020.
Marco teórico: el Modèle intégré du comportement (MIC)[modelo integrado de comportamiento] ofrece un fundamento para conceptualizar e identificar los factores que influyen en los comportamientos relativos a la salud. El Modelo representa un marco teórico pertinente para aprehender mejor la realidad en torno al consumo de alcohol.
Método: se ha elegido el “estudio del alcance” como método de síntesis de los conocimientos. Se buscó en las bases de datos de Health Policy Research Center, Medline, Psychology & Behavior al Sciences, PsycINFO y SocINDEX una serie de palabras clave sobre las creencias y el consumo de alcohol. Se retuvieron 107 artículos en total. Un análisis cuantitativo descriptivo y un análisis cualitativo temático permitieron sintetizar los resultados.
Resultados: la mayoría de los artículos provienen de los Estados (n=49), de Gran Bretaña (n=18) y de Australia (n=15). Los temas que aparecen en el análisis cualitativo de los artículos retenidos se inscriben en el marco de las creencias propuestas por el IMC, es decir, las creencias relacionadas con las emociones, las creencias sobre los efectos y consecuencias del alcohol, las creencias normativas y las relacionadas con el sentimiento de control. Surge del análisis que las creencias en torno al consumo de alcohol tienen una influencia importante sobre los comportamientos de consumo. Los resultados ilustran que estas creencias son complejas y variadas y están influenciadas por numerosos factores individuales y sociales como la edad, los hábitos de consumo y las normas culturales y de género.
Conclusión: el retrato de las creencias que giran en torno del consumo de alcohol puede iluminar la práctica, la investigación y la elaboración de políticas de prevención.
Palabras clave:
- creencias,
- alcohol,
- estudio del alcance
Parties annexes
Références
- Agence de santé publique du Canada. (2016). Rapport de l’administrateur en chef de la santé publique sur l’état de la santé publique au Canada, 2015 : La consommation d’alcool au Canada (ISSN : 1924-7087). Repéré à https://www.canada.ca/content/dam/canada/health-canada/migration/healthy-canadians/publications/department-ministere/state-public-health-alcohol-2015-etat-sante-publique-alcool/alt/state-phac-alcohol-2015-etat-aspc-alcool-fra.pdf
- *Allan, J., Clifford, A., Ball, P., Alston, M. et Meister, P. (2012). « You’re less complete if you haven’t got a can in your hand » : alcohol consumption and related harmful effects in rural Australia: the role and influence of cultural capital. Alcohol and alcoholism, 47(5), 624-629.
- April, N., Bégin, C., Hamel, D. et Morin, R. (2016). Portrait de la consommation d’alcool au Québec de 2000 à 2015 (ISBN : 978-2-550-75810-5). Institut national de santé publique du Québec. Repéré à https://www.inspq.qc.ca/pdf/publications/2137_consommation_alcool_quebec.pdf
- *Arbour-Nicitopoulos, K. P., Kwan, M. Y., Lowe, D., Taman, S. et Faulkner, G. E. (2010). Social norms of alcohol, smoking, and marijuana use within a Canadian university setting. Journal of American College Health, 59(3), 191-196.
- Arksey, H. et O’Malley, L. (2005). Scoping studies: towards a methodological framework. International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 8(1), 19-32.
- *Azar, D., White, V., Bland, S., Livingston, M., Room, R., Chikritzhs, T., Durkin, S., Gilmore, W. et Wakefield, M. (2014). « Something’s brewing » : the changing trends in alcohol coverage in Australian newspapers 2000–2011. Alcohol and Alcoholism, 49(3), 336-342.
- *Baines, L., Jones, A. et Christiansen, P. (2016). Hopelessness and alcohol use: The mediating role of drinking motives and outcome expectancies. Addictive behaviors reports, 4, 65-69.
- *Bareham, B. K., Kaner, E., Spencer, L. P. et Hanratty, B. (2018). Drinking in later life: a systematic review and thematic synthesis of qualitative studies exploring older people’s perceptions and experiences. Age and ageing, 48(1), 134-146.
- *Bartram, A., Eliott, J. et Crabb, S. (2017). « Why can’t I just not drink? » A qualitative study of adults’ social experiences of stopping or reducing alcohol consumption. Drug and alcohol review, 36(4), 449-455.
- Bhochhibhoya, A. et Branscum, P. (2018). The application of the theory of planned behavior and the integrative behavioral model towards predicting and understanding alcohol-related behaviors: A systematic review. Journal of Alcohol and Drug Education, 62(2), 39-63.
- *Biagioni, N., Pettigrew, S., Jones, S. C., Stafford, J., Daube, M. et Chikritzhs, T. (2017). Defining binge drinking: young drinkers’ perceptions of risky alcohol consumption. Public health, 152, 55-57.
- *Bocquier, A., Fressard, L., Verger, P., Legleye, S. et Peretti-Watel, P. (2017). Alcohol and cancer: risk perception and risk denial beliefs among the French general population. The European Journal of Public Health, 27(4), 705-710.
- *Bowden, J. A., Delfabbro, P., Room, R., Miller, C. L. et Wilson, C. (2014). Alcohol consumption and NHMRC guidelines: has the message got out, are people conforming and are they aware that alcohol causes cancer? Australian and New Zealand journal of public health, 38(1), 66-72.
- *Boyle, S.C., Smith, D.J., Earle, A.M. et LaBrie, J. W. (2018). What “likes” have got to do with it: Exposure to peers’ alcohol-related posts and perceptions of injunctive drinking norms. Journal of American College Health, 66(4), 252-258.
- *Boyle, S. C., LaBrie, J. W. et Witkovic, Y. D. (2016). Do lesbians overestimate alcohol use norms? Exploring the potential utility of personalized normative feedback interventions to reduce high-risk drinking in Southern California lesbian communities. Journal of gay & lesbian social services, 28(3), 179-194.
- *Brady, J., Iwamoto, D. K., Grivel, M., Kaya, A. et Clinton, L. (2016). A systematic review of the salient role of feminine norms on substance use among women. Addictive behaviors, 62, 83-90.
- *Bravo, A. J., Prince, M. A. et Pearson, M. R. (2017). College-related alcohol beliefs and problematic alcohol consumption: Alcohol protective behavioral strategies as a mediator. Substance use & misuse, 52(8), 1059-1068.
- Cancer Council (2019). Alcohol and cancer-National position statement. Repéré à https://www.cancer.org.au/about-us/policy-and-advocacy/position-statements/alcohol-and-cancer
- *Chapman, J., Harrison, N., Kostadinov, V., Skinner, N. et Roche, A. (2020). Older Australians’ perceptions of alcohol-related harms and low-risk alcohol guidelines. Drug and alcohol review, 39(1), 44-54.
- *Collins, S. E. et Spelman, P. J. (2013). Associations of descriptive and reflective injunctive norms with risky college drinking. Psychology of addictive behaviors, 27(4), 1175.
- *Connor, J.P, George, S.M, Gullo, M.J, Kelly, A.B. et Young, R.D. (2011). A prospective study of alcohol expectancies and self-efficacy as predictors of young adolescent alcohol misuse. Alcohol and Alcoholism, 46(2), 161–169.
- Cooke, R., Dahdah, M., Norman, P. et French, D. P. (2016). How well does the theory of planned behaviour predict alcohol consumption? A systematic review and meta-analysis. Health psychology review, 10(2), 148-167.
- *Cotter, T., Perez, D., Dunlop, S., Kite, J. et Gaskin, C. (2013). Knowledge and beliefs about alcohol consumption, longer-term health risks, and the link with cancer in a sample of Australian adults. New South Wales public health bulletin, 24(2), 81-86.
- *Cullum, J., O’Grady, M., Armeli, S. et Tennen, H. (2012). The role of context-specific norms and group size in alcohol consumption and compliance drinking during natural drinking events. Basic and applied social psychology, 34(4), 304-312.
- *Cullum, J., O’Grady, M., Sandoval, P., Armeli, S. et Tennen, H. (2013). Ignoring norms with a little help from my friends: Social support reduces normative influence on drinking behavior. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 32(1), 17-33.
- *Cunningham, J. A., Neighbors, C., Wild, T. C. et Humphreys, K. (2012). Normative misperceptions about alcohol use in a general population sample of problem drinkers from a large metropolitan city. Alcohol and alcoholism, 47(1), 63-66.
- *Dallas, R., Field, M., Jones, A., Christiansen, P., Rose, A. et Robinson, E. (2014). Influenced but unaware: Social influence on alcohol drinking among social acquaintances. Alcoholism: clinical and experimental research, 38(5), 1448-1453.
- *D’Angelo, J. et Moreno, M. (2019). Facebook-Induced Friend Shift and Identity Shift: A Longitudinal Study of Facebook Posting and Collegiate Drinking. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking,22(3),18691.
- Daudt, H. M. L., Van Mossel, C. et Scott S. J. (2013). Enhancing the scoping study methodology: a large, interprofessional team’s experience with Arksey and O’Malley’s framework. BMC medical research methodology, 13(1), 48.
- *Demant, J. et Järvinen, M. (2011). Social capital as norms and resources: Focus groups discussing alcohol. Addiction Research & Theory, 19(2), 91-101.
- *De Visser, R. O. et McDonnell, E. J. (2012). ‘That’s OK. He’s a guy’ : A mixed-methods study of gender double-standards for alcohol use. Psychology & health, 27(5), 618-639.
- DiBello, A. M., Miller, M. B. et Carey, K. B. (2019). Self-efficacy to limit drinking mediates the association between attitudes and alcohol-related outcomes. Substance Use & Misuse, 54(14), 2400-2408.
- *Dumas, T. M., Davis, J. P., Maxwell-Smith, M. A. et Bell, A. (2018). From Drinking Group Norms to Individual Drinking Consequences: A Moderated Mediation Model Examining the Role of Members’ Status, Identification with the Group and with Emerging Adulthood. Substance use & misuse, 53(8), 1311-1323.
- *Ehlke, S. J., Stamates, A. L., Kelley, M. L. et Braitman, A. L. (2019). Bisexual women’s reports of descriptive drinking norms for heterosexual, bisexual, and lesbian women. Psychology of sexual orientation and gender diversity, 6(2), 256.
- *Fish, J., Osberg, T. M. et Syed, M. (2017). “This is the way we were raised” : Alcohol beliefs and acculturation in relation to alcohol consumption among Native Americans. Journal of ethnicity in substance abuse, 16(2), 219-245.
- *Foster, D. W., Neighbors, C. et Krieger, H. (2015). Alcohol evaluations and acceptability: Examining descriptive and injunctive norms among heavy drinkers. Addictive behaviors, 42, 101-107.
- *França, L. R., Dautzenberg, B. et Reynaud, M. (2010). Heavy episodic drinking and alcohol consumption in French colleges: the role of perceived social norms. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 34(1), 164-174.
- *Garnett, C., Crane, D., West, R., Michie, S., Brown, J. et Winstock, A. (2015). Normative misperceptions about alcohol use in the general population of drinkers: A cross-sectional survey. Addictive behaviors, 42, 203-206.
- *Geusens, F., Bigman-Galimore, C. A. et Beullens, K. (2020). A cross-cultural comparison of the processes underlying the associations between sharing of and exposure to alcohol references and drinking intentions. New Media & Society, 22(1), 49-69.
- *Gibson, S. et Vassalotti, L. (2017). Liquid Courage : The Role of Alcohol in Women’s Transition to College. Journal of Alcohol and Drug Education, 61(2), 6289.
- Griswold, M. G., Fullman, N., Hawley, C., Arian, N., Zimsen, S. R., Tymeson, H. D., Vidhya, V. A., Douglas, T.M., Forouzanfar, J., Salama, K. … et Gakidou, E. (2018). Alcohol use and burden for 195 countries and territories, 1990–2016: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016. The Lancet, 392(10152), 1015-1035. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(18)31310-2
- *Grønkjaer, M., Curtis, T., De Crespigny, C. et Delmar, C. (2011). Acceptance and expectance: Cultural norms for alcohol use in Denmark. International journal of qualitative studies on health and well-being, 6(4), 8461.
- Groupe de travail scientifique sur les coûts et les méfaits de l’usage de substances au Canada. (2018). Coûts et méfaits de l’usage de substances au Canada (2007-2014). Institut canadien de recherche sur l’usage de substances et le Centre canadien sur les dépendances et l’usage de substances. Repéré à https://www.ccsa.ca/sites/default/files/2020-06/CSUCH-Canadian-Substance-Use-Costs-Harms-Report-2020-fr.pdf
- Guest, G., MacQueen, K. M. et Namey, E. E. (2011). Applied thematic analysis. États-Unis : Sage publications.
- *Guo, Y., Ward, R. M. et Speed, S. (2020). Alcohol-related social norms predict more than alcohol use: examining the relation between social norms and substance use. Journal of Substance Use, 25(3), 258-263.
- Gullo, M.J., Dawe, S., Kambouropoulos, N., Staiger, P.K. et Jackson, C.J. (2010). Alcohol expectancies and drinking refusal self-efficacy mediate the association of impulsivity with alcohol misuse. Alcoholism,Clinical and Experimental Research, 34, 1386–1399.
- *Haarni, I. et Hautamäki, L. (2010). Life experience and alcohol: 60–75-year-olds’ relationship to alcohol in theme interviews. Nordic studies on alcohol and drugs, 27(3), 241-258.
- *Halim, A., Hasking, P. et Allen, F. (2012). The role of social drinking motives in the relationship between social norms and alcohol consumption. Addictive behaviors, 37(12), 1335-1341.
- *Hardcastle, S. J., O’Connor, M. et Breen, L. J. (2019). Exploration of young adults’ influences on, and consequences of, avoiding alcohol consumption. Substance use & misuse, 54(5), 831-840. doi: 10.1080/10826084.2018.1546744
- *Härkönen, J. T. et Mäkelä, P. (2010) Changes in the norms guiding alcohol use in the Finnish general population over the past 40 years. Addiction Research & Theory, 18(4), 392-408.
- *Haydon, H. M., Obst, P. L. et Lewis, I. (2016). Beliefs underlying Women’s intentions to consume alcohol. BMC women’s health, 16(1), 36.
- *Henderson, L., Thompson, K., Hudson, A., Dobson, K., Chen, S. P. et Stewart, S. (2019). An analysis of campus culture, mental health, and drinking at three Canadian Universities. Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, 37(3), 97-113.
- *Herd, D. (2014). Changes in the prevalence of alcohol in rap music lyrics 1979–2009. Substance use & misuse, 49(3), 333-342.
- *Houben, K. et Wiers, R. W. (2009). Beer makes the heart grow fonder: single-target implicit attitudes toward beer but not alcohol are related to drinking behaviour in regular beer drinkers. Netherlands Journal of Psychology, 65(1), 10-21.
- *Hughes, K., Quigg, Z., Ford, K. et Bellis, M. A. (2019). Ideal, expected and perceived descriptive norm drunkenness in UK nightlife environments: a cross-sectional study. BMC public health, 19(1), 442.
- *Hussman, J. B. et Goldstein, A. L. (2019). Traditional femininity norms and alcohol problems in a Canadian sample of young women. Journal of Youth Studies, 22(8), 1117-1132.
- *Immonen, S., Valvanne, J. et Pitkälä, K. H. (2011). Older adults’ own reasoning for their alcohol consumption. International journal of geriatric psychiatry, 26(11), 1169-1176.
- *Iwamoto, D. K., Corbin, W., Takamatsu, S. et Castellanos, J. (2018). The association between multidimensional feminine norms, binge drinking and alcohol-related problems among young adult college women. Addictive behaviors, 76, 243-249.
- *Iwamoto, D. K., Grivel, M., Cheng, A., Clinton, L. et Kaya, A. (2016). Asian American women and alcohol-related problems: The role of multidimensional feminine norms. Journal of immigrant and minority health, 18(2), 360-368.
- *Karlsson, P. (2012). Personal experiences of drinking and alcohol-related risk perceptions: The importance of the subjective dimension. Nordic Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 29(4), 413-428.
- *Kraus, L., Room, R., Livingston, M., Pennay, A., Holmes, J. et Törrönen, J. (2020). Long waves of consumption or a unique social generation? Exploring recent declines in youth drinking. Addiction Research & Theory, 28(3), 183-193.
- *Kuendig, H., Plant, M. A., Plant, M. L., Miller, P., Kuntsche, S. et Gmel, G. (2008). Alcohol-related adverse consequences: cross-cultural variations in attribution process among young adults. European journal of public health, 18(4), 386-391.
- Kuntsche, E., Sznitman, S. R. et Kuntsche, S. (2017). Alcohol and Other Substance Use in a Cross-Cultural Perspective. Drug and Alcohol Review, 36(6), 71720.
- *Larimer, M. E., Kaysen, D. L., Lee, C. M., Kilmer, J. R., Lewis, M. A., Dillworth, T. et Neighbors, C. (2009). Evaluating level of specificity of normative referents in relation to personal drinking behavior. Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 16, 115-121.
- *Larimer, M. E., Neighbors, C., LaBrie, J. W., Atkins, D. C., Lewis, M. A., Lee, C. M. et Hodge, K. (2011). Descriptive drinking norms: For whom does reference group matter? Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 72(5), 833-843.
- *Lau-Barraco, C. et Collins, R. L. (2011). Social networks and alcohol use among nonstudent emerging adults: A preliminary study. Addictive Behaviors, 36(1-2), 47-54.
- *Lau-Barraco, C., Braitman, A. L., Stamates, A. L. et Linden-Carmichael, A. N. (2016). A latent profile analysis of drinking patterns among nonstudent emerging adults. Addictive behaviors, 62, 14-19.
- *Lawton, R., Conner, M. et McEachan, R. (2009). Desire or reason: predicting health behaviors from affective and cognitive attitudes. Health Psychology, 28(1), 56.
- *Lee, C. M., Blayney, J., Rhew, I. C., Lewis, M. A. et Kaysen, D. (2016). College status, perceived drinking norms, and alcohol use among sexual minority women. Psychology of sexual orientation and gender diversity, 3(1), 104.
- Levac, D., Colquhoun, H. et O’Brien, K. K. (2010). Scoping studies: advancing the methodology. Implementation Science, 5(1), 69.
- *Lewis, M. A., Rees, M. et Lee, C. M. (2009). Gender-specific normative perceptions of alcohol-related protective behavioral strategies. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 23(3), 539.
- *Likis-Werle, E. et Borders, L. D. (2017). College Women’s Experiences and Perceptions of Drinking: A Phenomenological Exploration. Journal of College Counseling, 20(2), 99112.
- *Lindgren, K. P., Ramirez, J. J., Olin, C. C. et Neighbors, C. (2016). Not the same old thing: Establishing the unique contribution of drinking identity as a predictor of alcohol consumption and problems over time. Psychology of addictive behaviors, 30(6), 659.
- *Livingston, M. (2012). Perceptions of low-risk drinking levels among Australians during a period of change in the official drinking guidelines. Drug and alcohol review, 31(2), 224-230. doi:10.1111/ j.1465-3362.2011.00414.x
- *Livingston, M. et Callinan, S. (2017). Changing attitudes to alcohol in Australia. Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs, 78(6), 844-852.
- *Livingstone, A. G., Young, H. et Manstead, A. S. (2011). “We Drink, Therefore We Are” The role of group identification and norms in sustaining and challenging heavy drinking culture. Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, 14(5), 637-649.
- *Lo Monaco, G., Gaussot, L. et Guimelli, C. (2009). Consommation de vin, pensée sociale et construction sociale de la normalité. Pratiques psychologiques, 15(4), 473-492.
- *Lovatt, M., Eadie, D., Meier, P. S., Li, J., Bauld, L., Hastings, G. et Holmes, J. (2015). Lay epidemiology and the interpretation of low-risk drinking guidelines by adults in the United Kingdom. Addiction, 110(12), 1912-1919.
- *Lowery, A. D, Merrill, J. E. et Carey, K. B. (2018). How acceptable are intoxicated behaviors? Discrepancy between personal versus perceived approval. Addictive behaviors, 76, 258-264.
- *Lui, P. P., Berkley, S. R. et Zamboanga, B. L. (2020). College alcohol belief and alcohol use: Testing moderations by cultural orientations and ethnicity. Journal of counseling psychology, 67(2), 184.
- *Mäkelä, P. et Maunu, A. (2016). Come on, have a drink: The prevalence and cultural logic of social pressure to drink more. Drugs : Education, Prevention and Policy, 23(4), 312-321.
- *Manafò, E., Giesbrecht, N. et Gupta, R. (2014). Survey of Ontario health professionals’ knowledge, attitudes and beliefs of alcohol-related harms: key findings. Journal of Substance Use, 19(4), 295-300.
- *Matley, A. I. F. et Davies, L. E. (2018). Resisting temptation : alcohol specific self-efficacy mediates the impacts of compensatory health beliefs and behaviours on alcohol consumption. Psychology, Health & Medicine, 23(3), 259-269.
- *Merrill, J. E., Read, J. P. et Colder, C. R. (2013). Normative perceptions and past-year consequences as predictors of subjective evaluations and weekly drinking behavior. Addictive behaviors, 38(11), 2625-2634.
- *Monk, R. L. et Heim, D. (2014). A systematic review of the Alcohol Norms literature: A focus on context. Drugs : Education, Prevention and Policy, 21(4), 263-282.
- *Montano, D. E. et Kasprzyk, D. (2008). Theory of reasoned action, theory of planned behavior and the integrated behavioral model. Dans H. Glanz, B.K. Rimer et K. Viswanath (dir.), Health behavior and health education: theory, research, and practice. États-Unis : John Wiley & Sons.
- *Moss, A. C., Dyer, K. R. et Albery, I. P. (2009). Knowledge of drinking guidelines does not equal sensible drinking. The Lancet, 374(9697), 1242. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(09)61788-8
- *Muhlack, E., Carter, D., Braunack-Mayer, A., Morfidis, N. et Eliott, J. (2018). Constructions of alcohol consumption by non-problematised middle-aged drinkers: a qualitative systematic review. BMC public health, 18(1), 1-10.
- *Mukamal, K. J., Phillips, R. S. et Mittleman, M. A. (2008). Beliefs, motivations, and opinions about moderate drinking: a cross-sectional survey. Family medicine, 40(3), 188.
- *Neighbors, C., Lindgren, K. P., Knee, C. R., Fossos, N. et DiBello, A. (2011). The influence of confidence on associations among personal attitudes, perceived injunctive norms, and alcohol consumption. Psychology of addictive behaviors, 25(4), 714.
- *Neighbors, C., Brown, G. A., Dibello, A. M., Rodriguez, L. M. et Foster, D. W. (2013). Reliance on God, prayer, and religion reduces influence of perceived norms on drinking. Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 74(3), 361-368.
- *Neighbors, C., LaBrie, J. W., Hummer, J. F., Lewis, M. A., Lee, C. M., Desai, S. ... et Larimer, M. E. (2010). Group identification as a moderator of the relationship between perceived social norms and alcohol consumption. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 24(3), 522.
- *Nordlund, S. et Østhus, S. (2013). What is alcohol abuse? Attitudes to drinking in seven European countries. Addiction Research & Theory, 21(5), 402-409.
- *O’Donnell, A., Abidi, L., Brown, J., Karlsson, N., Nilsen, P., Roback, K., ... et Thomas, K. (2018). Beliefs and attitudes about addressing alcohol consumption in health care: a population survey in England. BMC public health, 18(1), 391.
- Organisation mondiale de la Santé (OMS). (2018). Global status report on alcohol and health 2018. Repéré à http://www.who.int/substance_abuse/publications/global_alcohol_report/en/
- Organisation mondiale de la Santé (OMS). (2010). Stratégie mondiale visant à réduire l’usage nocif de l’alcool. Repéré à https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/44485/9789242599930_fre.pdf
- *Osberg, T.M. et Boyer, A. (2018). College alcohol beliefs and drinking consequences: A multiple mediation analysis of norms, expectancies, and willingness to experience drinking consequences. Health communication, 24(8), 746-751.
- Paradis, C., Demers, A. et Picard, E. (2010). Alcohol consumption: A different kind of Canadian mosaic. Canadian Journal of Public Health, 101(4), 275-280.
- *Park, H. S., Klein, K. A., Smith, S. et Martell, D. (2009). Separating subjective norms, university descriptive and injunctive norms, and US descriptive and injunctive norms for drinking behavior intentions. Health communication, 24(8), 746-751.
- *Parke, H., Michalska, M., Russell, A., Moss, A. C., Holdsworth, C., Ling, J. et Larsen, J. (2018). Understanding Drinking among Midlife Men in the United Kingdom: A Systematic Review of Qualitative Studies. Addictive Behaviors Reports, 8, 8594.
- *Patrick, M. E., Neighbors, C. et Lee, C. M. (2012). A hierarchy of 21st birthday drinking norms. Journal of college student development, 53(4), 581.
- Patton, M. Q. (2002). Two decades of developments in qualitative inquiry: a personal, experiential perspective. Qualitative social work, 1, 261–283.
- Peters, M. D., Godfrey, C. M., Khalil, H., McInerney, P., Parker, D. et Soares, C. B. (2015). Guidance for conducting systematic scoping reviews. International journal of evidence-based healthcare, 13(3), 141-146.
- *Pettigrew, S., Jongenelis, M., Pratt, I. S., Liang, W., Slevin, T., Chikritzhs, T. et Glance, D. (2016). Australian drinkers’ perceptions of alcohol-related risk by consumption status. AddictionResearch & Theory, 24(6), 507-513.
- *Piane, G. et Safer, A. (2008). Drinking behaviors, expectancies and perceived social norms among diverse college women. Journal of Alcohol and Drug Education, 52(1), 67.
- *Previte, J., Fry, M-L., Drennan, J. et Hasan S.F.E. (2015). Friends or foes: Group influence effects on moderate drinking behaviors. Journal of Business Research, 68(10), 2146-2154.
- *Robertson, K., Aitken, R. et Watkins, L. (2014). Public policy and personal preference: a disconnect between beliefs regarding responsible drinking and the motivation to get drunk. Public health, 11(128), 1030-1032.
- *Robinson, E., Jones, A., Christiansen, P. et Field, M. (2015). Drinking like everyone else: Trait self-control moderates the association between peer and personal heavy episodic drinking. Substance use & misuse, 50(5), 590-597.
- *Rodríguez, J. A. G. D. C., López-Sánchez, C., Soler, M. C. Q., Del Castillo-López, Á. G., Pertusa, M. G., Campos, J. C. M. et Inglés, C. J. (2013). Predictive models of alcohol use based on attitudes and individual values. Journal of drug education, 43(1), 19-31.
- *Room, R., Kuntsche, S., Dietze, P., Munné, M., Monteiro, M. et Greenfield, T. K. (2019). Testing consensus about situational norms on drinking: a cross-national comparison. Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs, 80(6), 651-658.
- *Sharma, B., Raciti, M., O’Hara, R., Reinhard, K. et Davies, F. (2013). A tri-country social marketing study of young university women’s alcohol consumption and the perceived influence of their peers’ attitudes. e-Journal of Social & Behavioural Research in Business, 4(1), 1-11.
- *Simons-Morton, B., Haynie, D. Bible, J et Liu, D. (2018). Prospective Associations of Actual and Perceived Descriptive Norms with Drinking Among Emerging Adults. Substance Use & Misuse, 53(11), 1771-1781.
- *Sloan, F. A., Eldred, L. M., Guo, T. et Xu, Y. (2013). Are people overoptimistic about the effects of heavy drinking? Journal of risk and uncertainty, 47(1), 93-127.
- Société canadienne du cancer. (2020). Limitez votre consommation d’alcool. Repéré à https://www.cancer.ca/fr-ca/prevention-and-screening/reduce-cancer-risk/make-healthy-choices/limit-alcohol/?region=qc
- *Sprague, D. J. et Vinson, D. C. (2017). Patient perceptions of risky drinking: Knowledge of daily and weekly low-risk guidelines and standard drink sizes. Substance abuse, 38(3), 253-256.
- Stockwell, T., Zhao, J., Chikritzhs, T. et Greenfield, T. (2008). What did you drink yesterday? Public health relevance of a recent recall method used in the 2004 Australian National Drug Strategy Household Survey. Addiction, 103(6), 919- 928.
- Stockwell, T., J. Zhao et G. Thomas. (2009). Should alcohol policies aim to reduce total alcohol consumption? New analyses of Canadian drinking patterns. Addiction Research and Theory, 17(2),135-151.
- *Tabernero, C., Luque, B. et Cuadrado, E. (2019). A Multilevel Study of Alcohol Consumption in Young Adults: Self-Efficacy, Peers’ Motivations and Protective Strategies. International journal of environmental research and public health, 16(16), 2827.
- *Talbott, L. L., Wilkinson, L. L., Moore, C. G. et Usdan, S. (2014). The role of injunctive norms and alcohol use during the first-semester of college. Journal of Alcohol and Drug Education, 58(1), 60–81
- Tessier, S., Hamel, D. et April, N. (2014). La consommation excessive d’alcool chez les jeunes Québécois : portrait et évolution de 2001 à 2012. Institut national de santé publique du Québec. Repéré à https://www.inspq.qc.ca/publications/1893
- *Tobin, K., Davey-Rothwell, M., Yang, C., Siconolfi, D. et Latkin, C. (2014). An examination of associations between social norms and risky alcohol use among African American men who have sex with men. Drug and alcohol dependence, 134, 218-221.
- * Törrönen, J. Roumeliotis, F., Samuelsson, E., Kraus, L. et Room, R. (2019). Why Are Young People Drinking Less than Earlier? Identifying and Specifying Social Mechanisms with a Pragmatist Approach. Journal of Drug Policy, 64, 1320.
- *Van Schoor, G., Bot, S. M. et Engels, R. C. (2008). Alcohol drinking in young adults: The predictive value of personality when peers come around. European Addiction Research, 14(3), 125-133.
- *Waddell, J. T., Corbin, W. R. et Marohnic, S. D. (2020). Putting things in context: Longitudinal relations between drinking contexts, drinking motives, and negative alcohol consequences. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors.
- *Wahesh, E., Lewis, T., Wyrick, D.L. et Ackerman, T. (2015). Perceived Norms, Outcome Expectancies, and Collegiate Drinking: Examining the Mediating Role of Drinking Motives. Journal of Addictions & Offender Counseling, 36(2), 81-100.
- *Wilson, T. D., Wray, L. A. et Turrisi, R. J. (2019). Positive alcohol expectancies and injunctive drinking norms in drinking to cope motives and alcohol use among older adults. Addictive behaviors reports, 10, 100207.
- *Wolf, J. P. et Chávez, R. (2015). “Just make sure you can get up and parent the next day” : Understanding the contexts, risks, and rewards of alcohol consumption for parents. Families in society, 96(3), 219-228.
- *Wright, C. A., Bruhn, C. M., Heymann, H. et Bamforth, C. W. (2008a). Beer consumers’ perceptions of the health aspects of alcoholic beverages. Journal of food science, 73(1), H12-H17. doi: 10.1111/j.1750-3841.2007.00574.x
- *Wright, C. A., Bruhn, C. M., Heymann, H. et Bamforth, C. W. (2008b). Beer and wine consumers’ perceptions of the nutritional value of alcoholic and nonalcoholic beverages. Journal of food science, 73(1), H8-H11.
- *Yang, B. (2018). The moderating role of close versus distal peer injunctive norms and interdependent self-construal in the effects of descriptive norms on college drinking. Health communication, 33(6), 762-770.
- Young, R.M., Hasking, P.A., Oei, T.P. et Loveday, W. (2007). Validation of the Drinking Refusal Self-Efficacy Questionnaire—Revised in an adolescent sample (DRSEQ-RA). Addictive Behaviors, 32, 862–868.