Drinking Together and Drinking Alone: A Social-Contextual Framework for Examining Risk for Alcohol Use Disorder
Kasey G. Creswell
Abstract
The context in which drinking occurs is a critical but relatively understudied factor in alcohol use disorder (AUD) etiology. In this article, I offer a social-contextual framework for examining AUD risk by reviewing studies on the unique antecedents and deleterious consequences of social versus solitary alcohol use in adolescents and young adults. Specifically, I provide evidence of distinct emotion regulatory functions across settings, with social drinking linked to enhancing positive emotions and social experiences and solitary drinking linked to coping with negative emotions. I end by considering the conceptual, methodological, and clinical implications of this social-contextual account of AUD risk.
Topics & Concepts
PsychologyAlcohol use disorderCoping (psychology)Developmental psychologySocial environmentSocial riskContext (archaeology)AlcoholClinical psychologySocial psychologyMedicineBiochemistryLawBiologyRisk analysis (engineering)Political sciencePaleontologyChemistrySubstance Abuse Treatment and OutcomesHomelessness and Social IssuesAlcohol Consumption and Health Effects