A problem drinking screening test for general hospital patients was developed in five experiments as a measure of the construct of problem drinking. In Experiment I, test questions were selected from a group of 59 psychological and medical items on the basis of responses from 1613 hospital patients. The resulting Problem Drinking Screening Test (PDST) has a 23 item self-report section and an optional physician's section of four items. Experiments II to V are concerned with the validity and reliability of the PDST. Viewing problem drinking as a construct is justified theoretically, and its relationship to alcoholism, to locus of control, to labelling theory and to idiographic and nomethetic measurement is given. A method for measuring t...
The literature is reviewed, as it relates to the diagnosis of alcoholism. The theories were divided ...
The psychometric properties of the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test (MAST), a commonly used self r...
This item is copyright by the Johns Hopkins University Press.No abstract is available for this item
The present study involved the development of an objective paper-and-pencil measure of McClelland's ...
The alcohol dependence syndrome proposed by Edwards and Gross in 1976 is a central concept in the Wo...
A sample of 275 subjects (general hospital staff, general practitioners and alcoholic patients) was ...
Those who binge drink are at increased risk for alcohol-related consequences when compared to non-bi...
Objectives:The objective of the present study was to evaluate the reliability and validity of the Ps...
Objective: The Brief Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test (bMAST) is a 10-item test derived from the 2...
Social epidemiological traditions of asking about problems related to drinking are considered. The i...
Objective: Expectancies about the outcomes of alcohol consumption are widely accepted as important d...
Objective: Expectancies about the outcomes of alcohol consumption are widely accepted as important d...
Objective: Expectancies about the outcomes of alcohol consumption are widely accepted as important d...
Background: Harmful drinking is common in medical inpatients, yet commonly missed due in part to tim...
Numerous studies have demonstrated that manyproblem drinkers (i.e., people who fulfill thediagnoses ...
The literature is reviewed, as it relates to the diagnosis of alcoholism. The theories were divided ...
The psychometric properties of the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test (MAST), a commonly used self r...
This item is copyright by the Johns Hopkins University Press.No abstract is available for this item
The present study involved the development of an objective paper-and-pencil measure of McClelland's ...
The alcohol dependence syndrome proposed by Edwards and Gross in 1976 is a central concept in the Wo...
A sample of 275 subjects (general hospital staff, general practitioners and alcoholic patients) was ...
Those who binge drink are at increased risk for alcohol-related consequences when compared to non-bi...
Objectives:The objective of the present study was to evaluate the reliability and validity of the Ps...
Objective: The Brief Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test (bMAST) is a 10-item test derived from the 2...
Social epidemiological traditions of asking about problems related to drinking are considered. The i...
Objective: Expectancies about the outcomes of alcohol consumption are widely accepted as important d...
Objective: Expectancies about the outcomes of alcohol consumption are widely accepted as important d...
Objective: Expectancies about the outcomes of alcohol consumption are widely accepted as important d...
Background: Harmful drinking is common in medical inpatients, yet commonly missed due in part to tim...
Numerous studies have demonstrated that manyproblem drinkers (i.e., people who fulfill thediagnoses ...
The literature is reviewed, as it relates to the diagnosis of alcoholism. The theories were divided ...
The psychometric properties of the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test (MAST), a commonly used self r...
This item is copyright by the Johns Hopkins University Press.No abstract is available for this item