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Patterns and predictors of high-intensity drinking and implications for intervention.

Megan E. Patrick, Yvonne M. Terry‐McElrath, Erin E. Bonar

2021Psychology of Addictive Behaviors29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

= 601; modal age 19; 57.0% male; 67.4% non-Hispanic White), bivariate associations between drinking intensity (moderate drinking [1-4 drinks for women/1-5 drinks for men], binge-only drinking [4-7/5-9 drinks], and HID [8+/10+ drinks]) and a range of sociodemographic characteristics, risk factors, and alcohol-related consequences were examined. Results showed binge-drinking norms, social and enhancement drinking motives, nicotine vaping, and use of limiting/stopping drinking and manner of drinking protective behavioral strategies differentiated all drinking intensity levels, lending support to HID and binge-only drinking having an overlapping risk profile. However, there were also risk factors uniquely associated with HID, including sex, college attendance, employment, HID norms, use of serious harm reduction protective behavioral strategies, family history of drinking problems, any cigarette or drug use other than marijuana, and depression symptoms. Therefore, risk factors differentiate young adult drinking intensity. These results can inform efforts to adapt interventions for young adults who report HID. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

Binge drinkingPsycINFOContext (archaeology)Psychological interventionEnvironmental healthPsychologyPoison controlInjury preventionSuicide preventionMonitoring the FutureHarm reductionIntervention (counseling)Occupational safety and healthMedicineSubstance abusePsychiatryPublic healthMEDLINENursingPolitical scienceBiologyPathologyLawPaleontologySubstance Abuse Treatment and OutcomesBehavioral Health and InterventionsSmoking Behavior and Cessation
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