Quality of Alcohol Use Histories Collected at Intake to Substance User Treatment
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of the Addictions
- Vol. 30 (8) , 963-989
- https://doi.org/10.3109/10826089509055822
Abstract
Many survey questions on alcohol require complex cognitive tasks, such as long-term recall, shifting reference periods, and numeric calculation. Moreover, alcohol-related impairment is known to affect cognitive ability. To assess the quality of data on self-reported alcohol use, internal consistency analyses were conducted as part of a comprehensive multisite prospective study of drug user treatment outcome undertaken in 11 cities throughout the United States (DATOS). Contrary to expectation, analyses found high levels of internal consistency. For questions on age of initiation of different types of alcohol use, over 99% of respondents (N = 2,842) reported consistent answers for each pair of logically related questions. Reports of being drunk and of quantity of alcohol consumed were similarly consistent.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Five-year reliability of self-reported alcohol consumption.Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 1990
- Answering Autobiographical Questions: The Impact of Memory and Inference on SurveysScience, 1987
- Comment on the validity of Watson et al.'s "Do alcoholics give valid self-reports?".Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 1985
- Assertions regarding effectiveness of treatment for alcoholism: Fact or fantasy?American Psychologist, 1983
- The Validity of Self‐Reported Alcohol Consumption and Alcohol Problems: A Literature ReviewBritish Journal of Addiction, 1982
- Measurement Errors in Reports of Consumer ExpendituresJournal of Marketing Research, 1970
- Primary Levels of Underreporting Psychotropic Drug UsePublic Opinion Quarterly, 1970
- Minimizing Response Errors in Financial Data: the PossibilitiesJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1968
- The Reliability and Validity of Interview Data Obtained from 59 Narcotic Drug AddictsAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1967
- A Study of Response Errors in Expenditures Data from Household InterviewsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1964