Predictive Utility of Protective Behavioral Strategies for Alcohol-Related Outcomes in a Community Sample of Young Adults
Fermín Fernández‐Calderón, Bella M. González‐Ponce, Carmen Díaz, Óscar M. Lozano
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Although previous studies have shown that protective behavioral strategies (PBS) predict alcohol use and its related consequences in college students, it is not known whether a broader population of young adults also benefit from PBS use. We longitudinally examined the relationship between PBS use and alcohol-related outcomes in a community sample of young adults composed of college students and noncollege individuals. METHOD: Targeted sampling was used to access 339 young adults in the community (mean age = 21.1 [SD = 2.21], 50.7% female; 59.0% college students) who completed baseline and 2-month follow-up measures. Three types of PBS were examined: manner of drinking, stopping/limiting drinking, and serious harm reduction. Regression analyses were conducted to test the predictive utility of PBS use on alcohol-related consequences, frequency and quantity of alcohol used, and binge drinking. RESULTS: Manner of drinking strategies were the strongest predictors of decreased alcohol consumption and alcohol-related negative consequences. Baseline manner of drinking scores were negatively associated with quantity of alcohol used, binge drinking, and alcohol-related consequences at follow-up. Serious harm reduction was longitudinally related to a lower frequency of alcohol consumption, stopping/limiting drinking was not associated with any outcome, and total PBS score was associated with all study outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings could benefit health promotion by informing the design of preventive interventions for reducing alcohol use and attendant health-related negative consequences in the young adult community. These results may also be of value in extending the applicability of PBS findings to a broader alcohol-using population of young adults beyond those exclusively composed of college students.