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Featured researches published by Zsuzsanna Elekes.


Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking | 2014

Problematic internet use and problematic online gaming are not the same: findings from a large nationally representative adolescent sample.

Orsolya Király; Mark D. Griffiths; Róbert Urbán; Judit Farkas; Gyöngyi Kökönyei; Zsuzsanna Elekes; Domokos Tamás; Zsolt Demetrovics

There is an ongoing debate in the literature whether problematic Internet use (PIU) and problematic online gaming (POG) are two distinct conceptual and nosological entities or whether they are the same. The present study contributes to this question by examining the interrelationship and the overlap between PIU and POG in terms of sex, school achievement, time spent using the Internet and/or online gaming, psychological well-being, and preferred online activities. Questionnaires assessing these variables were administered to a nationally representative sample of adolescent gamers (N=2,073; Mage=16.4 years, SD=0.87; 68.4% male). Data showed that Internet use was a common activity among adolescents, while online gaming was engaged in by a considerably smaller group. Similarly, more adolescents met the criteria for PIU than for POG, and a small group of adolescents showed symptoms of both problem behaviors. The most notable difference between the two problem behaviors was in terms of sex. POG was much more strongly associated with being male. Self-esteem had low effect sizes on both behaviors, while depressive symptoms were associated with both PIU and POG, affecting PIU slightly more. In terms of preferred online activities, PIU was positively associated with online gaming, online chatting, and social networking, while POG was only associated with online gaming. Based on our findings, POG appears to be a conceptually different behavior from PIU, and therefore the data support the notion that Internet Addiction Disorder and Internet Gaming Disorder are separate nosological entities.


European Addiction Research | 2015

Prevalence of and Potential Influencing Factors for Alcohol Dependence in Europe

Jürgen Rehm; Peter Anderson; J. Barry; P. Dimitrov; Zsuzsanna Elekes; F. Feijão; Ulrich Frick; Antoni Gual; Gerhard Gmel; Ludwig Kraus; Simon Marmet; J. Raninen; Maximilien X. Rehm; Emanuele Scafato; Kevin D. Shield; M. Trapencieris

Alcohol use disorders (AUDs), and alcohol dependence (AD) in particular, are prevalent and associated with a large burden of disability and mortality. The aim of this study was to estimate prevalence of AD in the European Union (EU), Iceland, Norway, and Switzerland for the year 2010, and to investigate potential influencing factors. The 1-year prevalence of AD in the EU was estimated at 3.4% among people 18-64 years of age in Europe (women 1.7%, men 5.2%), resulting in close to 11 million affected people. Taking into account all people of all ages, AD, abuse and harmful use resulted in an estimate of 23 million affected people. Prevalence of AD varied widely between European countries, and was significantly impacted by drinking cultures and social norms. Correlations with level of drinking and other drinking variables and with major known outcomes of heavy drinking, such as liver cirrhosis or injury, were moderate. These results suggest a need to rethink the definition of AUDs.


Annals of Family Medicine | 2015

General Practitioners Recognizing Alcohol Dependence: A Large Cross-Sectional Study in 6 European Countries

Jürgen Rehm; Allaman Allamani; Roberto Della Vedova; Zsuzsanna Elekes; Andrzej Jakubczyk; Inga Landsmane; Jakob Manthey; José Moreno-España; Lars Pieper; Charlotte Probst; S. Snikere; Pierluigi Struzzo; Fabio Voller; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Antoni Gual; Marcin Wojnar

PURPOSE Although alcohol dependence causes marked mortality and disease burden in Europe, the treatment rate is low. Primary care could play a key role in reducing alcohol-attributable harm by screening, brief interventions, and initiating or referral to treatment. This study investigates identification of alcohol dependence in European primary care settings. METHODS Assessments from 13,003 general practitioners, and 9,098 interviews (8,476 joint number of interviewed patients with a physician’s assessment) were collected in 6 European countries. Alcohol dependence, comorbidities, and health service utilization were assessed by the general practitioner and independently using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) and other structured interviews. Weighted regression analyses were used to compare the impact of influencing variables on both types of diagnoses. RESULTS The rate of patients being identified as alcohol dependent by the CIDI or a general practitioner was about equally high, but there was not a lot of overlap between cases identified. Alcohol-dependent patients identified by a physician were older, had higher rates of physicial comorbidity (liver disease, hypertension), and were socially more marginalized, whereas average consumption of alcohol and mental comorbidity were equally high in both groups. CONCLUSION General practitioners were able to identify alcohol dependence, but the cases they identified differed from cases identified using the CIDI. The role of the CIDI as the reference standard should be reexamined, as older alcohol-dependent patients with severe comorbidities seemed to be missed in this assessment.


Substance Use & Misuse | 2011

Contextual Determinants of Alcohol Consumption Changes and Preventive Alcohol Policies: A 12-Country European Study in Progress

Allaman Allamani; Fabio Voller; Adriano Decarli; Veronica Casotto; Karin Pantzer; Peter Anderson; Antoni Gual; Silvia Matrai; Zsuzsanna Elekes; Irmgard Eisenbach-Stangl; Gabriele Schmied; Ronald A. Knibbe; Sturla Nordlund; Oystein Skjaelaaen; Börje Olsson; Jenny Cisneros Örnberg; Esa Österberg; Thomas Karlsson; Martin Plant; Moira Plant; Patrick Miller; Nikki Coghill; Grazyna Swiatkiewicz; Beatrice Annaheim; Gerhard Gmel

Beginning with France in the 1950s, alcohol consumption has decreased in Southern European countries with few or no preventive alcohol policy measures being implemented, while alcohol consumption has been increasing in Northern European countries where historically more restrictive alcohol control policies were in place, even though more recently they were loosened. At the same time, Central and Eastern Europe have shown an intermediate behavior. We propose that country-specific changes in alcohol consumption between 1960 and are explained by a combination of a number of factors: (1) preventive alcohol policies and (2) social, cultural, economic, and demographic determinants. This article describes the methodology of a research study designed to understand the complex interactions that have occurred throughout Europe over the past five decades. These include changes in alcohol consumption, drinking patterns and alcohol-related harm, and the actual determinants of such changes.


Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking | 2013

Psychometric Properties of the Problematic Online Gaming Questionnaire Short-Form and Prevalence of Problematic Online Gaming in a National Sample of Adolescents

Orsolya Pápay; Róbert Urbán; Mark D. Griffiths; Katalin Nagygyörgy; Judit Farkas; Gyöngyi Kökönyei; Katalin Felvinczi; Attila Oláh; Zsuzsanna Elekes; Zsolt Demetrovics

The rise and growing popularity of online games has led to the appearance of excessive gaming that in some cases can lead to physical and psychological problems. Several measures have been developed to explore the nature and the scale of the phenomenon. However, few measures have been validated psychometrically. The aim of the present study was to test the psychometric properties of the 12-item Problematic Online Gaming Questionnaire Short-Form (POGQ-SF) and to assess the prevalence of problematic online gaming. Data collection was carried out to assess the prevalence of problematic online gaming in a national representative adolescent sample by using an offline (pen and pencil) method. A total of 5,045 secondary school students were assessed (51% male, mean age 16.4 years, SD=0.9 years) of which 2,804 were gamers (65.4% male, mean age 16.4 years, SD=0.9 years). Confirmatory factor analysis was applied to test the measurement model of problematic online gaming, and latent profile analysis was used to identify the proportion of gamers whose online game use can be considered problematic. Results showed that the original six-factor model yielded appropriate fit to the data, and thus the POGQ-SF has appropriate psychometric properties. Latent profile analysis revealed that 4.6% of the adolescents belong to a high risk group and an additional 13.3% to a low risk group. Due to its satisfactory psychometric characteristics, the 12-item POGQ-SF appears to be an adequate tool for the assessment of problematic online gaming.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Problematic social media use: results from a large-scale nationally representative adolescent sample

Fanni Bányai; Ágnes Zsila; Orsolya Király; Aniko Maraz; Zsuzsanna Elekes; Mark D. Griffiths; Cecilie Schou Andreassen; Zsolt Demetrovics

Despite social media use being one of the most popular activities among adolescents, prevalence estimates among teenage samples of social media (problematic) use are lacking in the field. The present study surveyed a nationally representative Hungarian sample comprising 5,961 adolescents as part of the European School Survey Project on Alcohol and Other Drugs (ESPAD). Using the Bergen Social Media Addiction Scale (BSMAS) and based on latent profile analysis, 4.5% of the adolescents belonged to the at-risk group, and reported low self-esteem, high level of depression symptoms, and elevated social media use. Results also demonstrated that BSMAS has appropriate psychometric properties. It is concluded that adolescents at-risk of problematic social media use should be targeted by school-based prevention and intervention programs.


Alcohol and Alcoholism | 2015

People with Alcohol Use Disorders in Specialized Care in Eight Different European Countries

Jürgen Rehm; Allaman Allamani; Henri-Jean Aubin; Roberto Della Vedova; Zsuzsanna Elekes; Ulrich Frick; Andrzej Jakubczyk; Nikoleta Kostogianni; Inga Landsmane; Jakob Manthey; Laia Miquel; François Paille; Lars Pieper; Charlotte Probst; Francesca Scafuri; Kevin D. Shield; S. Snikere; Pierluigi Struzzo; M. Trapencieris; Fabio Voller; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Antoni Gual; Marcin Wojnar

AIM To provide a description of patients receiving alcohol treatment in eight different European countries, including the level of comorbidities and functional limitations. METHODS Drinking behaviours, DSM-IV alcohol use disorder (AUD), mental and somatic comorbidities, disability and health services utilization of 1767 patients from various specialized treatment settings were assessed as representative for regions of eight European countries. Severity of alcohol dependence (AD) in terms of drinking level was compared with a large representative US sample. RESULTS Patients in specialized care for AUDs showed high levels of consumption [average level of daily ethanol intake: 141.1 g, standard deviation (SD): 116.0 g], comorbidity [e.g. liver problems: 19.6%, 95% confidence interval (CI): 17.5-21.6%; depression: 43.2%, 95% CI: 40.7-45.8%; anxiety: 50.3%, 95% CI: 47.8-52.9%], disability and health services utilization (average number of nights spent in hospital(s) during the last 6 months: 8.8, SD: 19.5 nights). Severity of AD was similar to the US sample, but European men consumed on average more alcohol daily. CONCLUSIONS High levels of consumption, somatic and mental comorbidities, disability and functional losses were found in this representative treatment sample, indicating that treatment was initiated only at severe stages of AUDs. Earlier initiation of treatment could help avoid some of the health and social burden.


Archive | 2016

ESPAD report 2015 results from the European School Survey Project on Alcohol and Other Drugs.

L Kraus; Ulf Guttormsson; Håkan Leifman; Sharon Arpa; Sabrina Molinaro; Karin Monshouwer; M. Trapencieris; Julian Vicente; Ársæll Már Arnarsson; Olga Balakireva; Elin K Bye; Anina Chileva; Mihai Ciocanu; Luke Clancy; Ladislav Csémy; Tatijana Djurisic; Zsuzsanna Elekes; Fernanda Feijão; Silvia Florescu; Iva Pejnovic Franelic

The main purpose of the European School Survey Project on Alcohol and Other Drugs (ESPAD) is to collect comparable data on substance use among 15- to 16-year-old students in order to monitor trends ...


European Addiction Research | 2002

Old and New Drug Consumption Habits in Hungary, Romania and Moldova

Zsuzsanna Elekes; László Kovács

The authors present patterns of drug use during the political and social transition periods in Hungary, Romania and Moldova. During the 1990s, each country witnessed major changes in the proliferation of various deviant behaviour patterns. These changes remain rather difficult to interpret and often reveal conflicting tendencies. Available statistical data and research results vary from country to country. On the basis of the information available, we can conclude that the era following the political transitions is characterised by an increase in drug-related problems. Although the extent of illicit drug use is probably much smaller than the extent of many other social problems, the novel nature of the drug problem and its extreme growth in the 1990s make it more of a social issue in all three countries.


Journal of Substance Use | 2009

Changes in perceived risk of different substance use by ranking order of drug attitudes in different ESPAD‐countries

Zsuzsanna Elekes; Patrick Miller; Pavla Chomynova; François Beck

Data from the surveys in eight countries of the European Schools Project on Alcohol and other Drugs in the years 1995, 1999, and 2003 were available. Changes over time in the perceptions of the risk of using alcohol, cigarettes, cocaine, marijuana, LSD, amphetamines, ecstasy, and inhalants were assessed. On average the overall proportions of the samples seeing use of these substances as ‘very risky’ fell between 1995 and 2003 in all eight countries as prevalences rose slightly in most of the countries. However, there was a tendency for the gap to widen over time between the proportions seeing regular use of illicit substances as very risky and the proportions seeing occasional use as very risky. Relative to other substances cigarette smoking and heavy weekend drinking were ranked more risky in 2003 than in 1995.

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Zsolt Demetrovics

Eötvös Loránd University

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Mark D. Griffiths

Nottingham Trent University

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Orsolya Király

Eötvös Loránd University

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Róbert Urbán

Eötvös Loránd University

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Antoni Gual

University of Barcelona

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Ladislav Csémy

National Institutes of Health

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Jürgen Rehm

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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László Kovács

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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