Do alcohol-related consequences and how they are evaluated predict consumption during and days until the next drinking event?
Autor: | Holly K. Boyle, Thomas M. Piasecki, Kate B. Carey, Jennifer E. Merrill, Michelle Haikalis, Ryan W. Carpenter, Kristina M. Jackson, Robert Miranda |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Consumption (economics)
Multilevel model Medicine (miscellaneous) PsycINFO Alcohol Drinking in College Article Psychiatry and Mental health Clinical Psychology Current sample Intervention (counseling) Environmental health Predictive power Humans Students Psychology Alcohol-Related Disorders Event (probability theory) |
Zdroj: | Psychol Addict Behav |
ISSN: | 1939-1501 0893-164X |
Popis: | Objective: Alcohol-related consequences are most often examined as outcomes of alcohol use. However, it is also possible that experiencing consequences may predict future drinking behavior. The predictive power of consequences on future drinking behavior may involve both objective experiences of consequences and subjective evaluations of those consequences (i.e., how positive, how negative). The purpose of the present study was to understand how positive and negative alcohol-related consequences-and evaluations of those consequences-predict elements of the next drinking event among college students. Method: 96 participants reported alcohol use and related consequences over a 28-day daily assessment period. Results: Survival analysis and multilevel modeling were used to examine the influence of positive and negative consequences from a given drinking event on latency to and number of drinks consumed at the next drinking event. Contrary to hypotheses, subsequent drinking was not impacted by recent consequences nor how they were perceived. Conclusions: Though theoretically, experiencing alcohol consequences may impact proximal drinking behavior, findings suggest that, in the current sample, other factors have greater importance in the latency between drinking events and amount of alcohol consumed. Future work should continue to identify event-level predictors that impact behavior at the next drinking event, and ways drinkers attempt to avoid repetition of drinking consequences other than simply drinking less (e.g., protective behavioral strategies), as such factors would be valuable targets for intervention. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved). |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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