Longitudinal examination of high-risk drinking contexts: Daytime drinking, pregaming, and drinking games linked to high-risk alcohol use and negative consequences in young adults

被引:2
作者
Graupensperger, Scott [1 ,3 ]
Calhoun, Brian H. [1 ]
Fleming, Charles N. [1 ]
Patrick, Megan E. [2 ]
Lee, Christine M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Psychiat & Behav Sci, Seattle, WA USA
[2] Univ Michigan, Inst Social Res, Ann Arbor, MI USA
[3] Univ Washington, Psychiat & Behav Sci, Box 357238, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
来源
ALCOHOL-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH | 2023年 / 47卷 / 07期
关键词
alcohol; AUDIT; cannabis; pre-partying; simultaneous alcohol and marijuana; COLLEGE-STUDENTS; MARIJUANA USE; MOTIVES; CONSUMPTION; EXPECTANCIES; VALIDATION; PLAY;
D O I
10.1111/acer.15095
中图分类号
R194 [卫生标准、卫生检查、医药管理];
学科分类号
摘要
Background The contexts in which young adults drink alcohol play a salient role in alcohol-related outcomes and negative consequences at an event-level, but less is known about longitudinal risks. We collected longitudinal monthly data across 2 years on (a) daytime drinking, (b) pregaming/pre-partying, and (c) playing drinking games. We then examined associations between drinking in these contexts and within-person variability in alcohol consumption, consequences, and simultaneous alcohol and marijuana (SAM) use in a given month. We also examined the extent to which drinking in these contexts predicted hazardous drinking (using Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) scores) at a distal follow-up timepoint, controlling for baseline AUDIT scores.Method A community sample of 759 young adults (M-age = 21.1 years; 56.4% female) completed monthly surveys for 24 consecutive months and a distal 30-month follow-up. Multilevel models estimated within- and between-person associations between drinking context frequencies (daytime drinking, pregaming, drinking games) and alcohol-related outcomes (weekly consumption, consequences, SAM use). A single-level negative binomial regression tested associations between drinking context frequency averages across a two-year period and changes in AUDIT scores from baseline to a follow-up 2.5 years later.Results Over 75% of the sample of non-abstaining young adults reported drinking in each of the three contexts at least once during the 24-month period. Within-persons, young adults reported greater consumption, more negative consequences, and increased likelihood of SAM use during months that they drank in these contexts more often than usual. Each context was associated with negative consequences, even when controlling for alcohol use frequency. More frequent daytime drinking and pregaming, but not drinking games, were associated with increases in AUDIT scores at the 30-month follow-up, suggesting that there are potential long-term risks of drinking in these contexts.Conclusions Findings suggest that daytime drinking, pregaming, and playing drinking games are high-risk contexts in terms of month-to-month and long-term risks. Additional research is needed on the various contexts in which young adults drink alcohol and the extent to which contextual factors interact with one another to amplify/reduce risks and harms.
引用
收藏
页码:1364 / 1376
页数:13
相关论文
共 57 条
  • [1] Arterberry B.J., 2023, J STUD ALCOHOL DRUGS, V5
  • [2] Alcohol and cannabis motives: differences in daily motive endorsement on alcohol, cannabis, and alcohol/cannabis co-use days in a cannabis-using sample
    Arterberry, Brooke J.
    Goldstick, Jason E.
    Walton, Maureen A.
    Cunningham, Rebecca M.
    Blow, Frederic C.
    Bonar, Erin E.
    [J]. ADDICTION RESEARCH & THEORY, 2021, 29 (02) : 111 - 116
  • [3] Development and initial validation of a measure of motives for pregaming in college students
    Bachrach, Rachel L.
    Merrill, Jennifer E.
    Bytschkow, Katrina M.
    Read, Jennifer P.
    [J]. ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2012, 37 (09) : 1038 - 1045
  • [4] Bolger N., 2013, Intensive longitudinal methods: An introduction to diary and experience sampling research
  • [5] Brooks ME., 2017, BIORXIV, P1, DOI [10.1101/132753, DOI 10.1101/132753]
  • [6] Day drinking among college students and its association with risky substance use behaviors
    Calhoun, Brian H.
    Maggs, Jennifer L.
    [J]. ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 2021, 45 (12): : 2546 - 2559
  • [7] Pre-game drinking among young adults and its association with positive and negative alcohol consequences
    Calhoun, Brian H.
    Linden-Carmichael, Ashley N.
    [J]. ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2022, 124
  • [8] SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF ALCOHOL-CONSUMPTION - THE EFFECTS OF SOCIAL-INTERACTION AND MODEL STATUS ON THE SELF-ADMINISTRATION OF ALCOHOL
    COLLINS, RL
    PARKS, GA
    MARLATT, GA
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CONSULTING AND CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1985, 53 (02) : 189 - 200
  • [9] Understanding perceived usefulness and actual use of protective behavioral strategies: The role of perceived norms for the reasons that young adult drinkers use protective behavioral strategies
    Fairlie, Anne M.
    Lewis, Melissa A.
    Waldron, Katja A.
    Wallace, Elliot C.
    Lee, Christine M.
    [J]. ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2021, 112
  • [10] Prepartying, drinking games, and extreme drinking among college students: A daily-level investigation
    Fairlie, Anne M.
    Maggs, Jennifer L.
    Lanza, Stephanie T.
    [J]. ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2015, 42 : 91 - 95