Relations of Stress and Drinking Motives to Young Adult Alcohol Misuse: Variations by Gender

被引:29
作者
Temmen, Chelsie D. [1 ]
Crockett, Lisa J. [2 ]
机构
[1] Eunice Kennedy Shriver Natl Inst Child Hlth & Hum, Social & Behav Sci Branch, 6710B Rockledge Dr, Bethesda, MD 20817 USA
[2] Univ Nebraska, Dept Psychol, 315 Burnett Hall, Lincoln, NE 68588 USA
关键词
Early adulthood; Alcohol use; Stress; Drinking motives; LONGITUDINAL ANALYSIS; EMERGING ADULTHOOD; NEGATIVE AFFECT; COPING MOTIVES; CONSEQUENCES; COLLEGE; EXPECTANCIES; CONSUMPTION; EXPECTATIONS; TRANSITION;
D O I
10.1007/s10964-019-01144-6
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Theory and empirical findings have linked stress exposure to young adult alcohol misuse, but the processes underlying this association have not been fully investigated. This study examined gender differences in the indirect pathways linking stress in developmentally relevant domains to alcohol misuse in young adults, focusing on drinking motives as a possible mediator of the association. The longitudinal associations between adolescent heavy drinking and young adult stress were also explored. Participants were rural young adults who had been surveyed previously in adolescence (N=442; 55.7% female; 96% White; Mage=23.29, SD=1.07). Chronic stress and drinking motives were concurrently associated with young adult alcohol misuse. For men, occupational stress was indirectly related to alcohol misuse through both social and coping motives for drinking, whereas for women relationship stress was indirectly related to alcohol misuse through social motives only. When investigating the longitudinal effects of adolescent drunkenness, more frequent drunkenness in adolescence was related to more adult occupational stress for men but to neither kind of stress for women. These findings indicate that stress in specific life domains is related to young adult alcohol misuse through drinking motives, that the link between stress and alcohol misuse may be bidirectional for men, and that different stressors and drinking motives are salient for young adult men and women.
引用
收藏
页码:907 / 920
页数:14
相关论文
共 66 条
  • [31] Drinking motives as mediators of the link between alcohol expectancies and alcohol use among adolescents
    Kuntsche, Emmanuel
    Knibbe, Ronald
    Engels, Rutger
    Gmel, Gerhard
    [J]. JOURNAL OF STUDIES ON ALCOHOL AND DRUGS, 2007, 68 (01) : 76 - 85
  • [32] Same Wording, Distinct Concepts? Testing Differences Between Expectancies and Motives in a Mediation Model of Alcohol Outcomes
    Kuntsche, Emmanuel
    Wiers, Reinout W.
    Janssen, Tim
    Gmel, Gerhard
    [J]. EXPERIMENTAL AND CLINICAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2010, 18 (05) : 436 - 444
  • [33] Reciprocal Influences of Drinking Motives on Alcohol Use and Related Consequences: A Full Cross-Lagged Panel Study Among Young Adult Men
    Labhart, Florian
    Kuntsche, Emmanuel
    Wicki, Matthias
    Gmel, Gerhard
    [J]. BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE, 2017, 43 (04) : 277 - 284
  • [34] Gender differences in high-risk situations for drinking: Are they mediated by depressive symptoms?
    Lau-Barraco, Cathy
    Skewes, Monica C.
    Stasiewicz, Paul R.
    [J]. ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2009, 34 (01) : 68 - 74
  • [35] Leaper C., 2002, Handbook of parenting, V2nd, P189
  • [36] Leaper C., 2007, Handbook of socialization, P561, DOI DOI 10.5860/CHOICE.45-0345
  • [37] Subjective underchallenge at work and its impact on mental health
    Lehmann, Anja
    Burkert, Silke
    Daig, Isolde
    Glaesmer, Heide
    Braehler, Elmar
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL ARCHIVES OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, 2011, 84 (06) : 655 - 664
  • [38] Stress, drinking, and the adverse consequences of drinking in two samples of young adults
    McCreary, DR
    Sadava, SW
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGY OF ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 1998, 12 (04) : 247 - 261
  • [39] Depressive symptoms, stress, and support: Gendered trajectories from adolescence to young adulthood
    Meadows, SO
    Brown, JS
    Elder, GH
    [J]. JOURNAL OF YOUTH AND ADOLESCENCE, 2006, 35 (01) : 93 - 103
  • [40] Interactions between adaptive coping and drinking to cope in predicting naturalistic drinking and drinking following a lab-based psychosocial stressor
    Merrill, Jennifer E.
    Thomas, Suzanne E.
    [J]. ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2013, 38 (03) : 1672 - 1678