The relationship between unplanned drinking and event-level alcohol-related outcomes.
Miranda L. Lauher, Jennifer E. Merrill, Holly K. Boyle, Kate B. Carey
Abstract
= 96) provided data on their drinking experiences each morning during a 28-day ecological momentary assessment study. Hierarchical linear models revealed that unplanned drinking events were associated with lower alcohol quantity, fewer alcohol-related consequences, and lower ratings on how "worth it" the drinking event was, compared to planned events. In contrast to prior work highlighting the risk associated with unplanned heavy drinking, our findings indicate that drinking events that are planned (vs. unplanned) are related to increased consumption and the experience of negative consequences. Additional research is needed to more definitively assess the differences between planned and unplanned drinking events and their relationship to adverse alcohol-related outcomes among college students. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).