A Systems Approach to College Drinking: Development of a Deterministic Model for Testing Alcohol Control Policies

被引:20
作者
Scribner, Richard [1 ]
Ackleh, Azmy S. [1 ]
Fitzpatrick, Ben G. [1 ]
Jacquez, Geoffrey [1 ]
Thibodeaux, Jeremy J. [1 ]
Rommel, Robert [1 ]
Simonsen, Neal [1 ]
机构
[1] Louisiana State Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, New Orleans, LA 70112 USA
关键词
STUDENT BINGE DRINKING; PERCEIVED NORMS; HEAVY DRINKING; OUTLET DENSITY; HEALTH; EPIDEMIOLOGY; PREVENTION; ENFORCEMENT; CONSUMPTION; PREDICTORS;
D O I
10.15288/jsad.2009.70.805
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
Objective: The misuse and abuse of alcohol among college students remain persistent problems. Using a systems approach to understand the dynamics of student drinking behavior and thus forecasting the impact of campus policy to address the problem represents a novel approach. Toward this end, the successful development of a predictive mathematical model of college drinking would represent a significant advance for prevention efforts. Method: A deterministic, compartmental model of college drinking was developed, incorporating three processes: (1) individual factors, (2) social interactions, and (3) social norms. The model quantifies these processes in terms of the movement of students between drinking compartments characterized by five styles of college drinking: abstainers, light drinkers, moderate drinkers, problem drinkers, and heavy episodic drinkers. Predictions from the model were first compared with actual campus-level data and then used to predict the effects of several simulated interventions to address heavy episodic drinking. Results: First, the model provides a reasonable fit of actual drinking styles of students attending Social Norms Marketing Research Project campuses varying by "wetness" and by drinking styles of matriculating students. Second, the model predicts that a combination of simulated interventions targeting heavy episodic drinkers at a moderately "dry" campus would extinguish heavy episodic drinkers, replacing them with light and moderate drinkers. Instituting the same combination of simulated interventions at a moderately "wet" campus would result in only a moderate reduction in heavy episodic drinkers (i.e., 50% to 35%). Conclusions: A simple, five-state compartmental model adequately predicted the actual drinking patterns of students front a variety of campuses surveyed in the Social Norms Marketing Research Project study. The model predicted the impact on drinking patterns of several simulated interventions to address heavy episodic drinking on various types of campuses. (J. Stud. Alcohol Drugs 70: 805-821, 2009)
引用
收藏
页码:805 / 821
页数:17
相关论文
共 52 条
[1]   THE DEVELOPMENT OF OPERATIONS-RESEARCH AS A SCIENCE [J].
ACKOFF, RL .
OPERATIONS RESEARCH, 1956, 4 (03) :265-295
[2]   POPULATION BIOLOGY OF INFECTIOUS-DISEASES .1. [J].
ANDERSON, RM ;
MAY, RM .
NATURE, 1979, 280 (5721) :361-367
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1996, Compartmental analysis in biology and medicine
[4]   A new tool for epidemiology: The usefulness of dynamic-agent models in understanding place effects on health [J].
Auchincloss, Amy H. ;
Roux, Ana V. Diez .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2008, 168 (01) :1-8
[5]   HIGH-RISK DRINKING ACROSS THE TRANSITION FROM HIGH-SCHOOL TO COLLEGE [J].
BAER, JS ;
KIVLAHAN, DR ;
MARLATT, GA .
ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 1995, 19 (01) :54-61
[6]   Peer influences on college drinking: A review of the research [J].
Borsari, B ;
Carey, KB .
JOURNAL OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE, 2001, 13 (04) :391-424
[7]   Markov Chain Modeling of Initiation and Demand: The Case of the US Cocaine Epidemic [J].
Jonathan P. Caulkins ;
Doris A. Behrens ;
Claudia Knoll ;
Gernot Tragler ;
Doris Zuba .
Health Care Management Science, 2004, 7 (4) :319-329
[8]   Dynamic compartmental model of trends in Australian drug use [J].
Caulkins J.P. ;
Dietze P. ;
Ritter A. .
Health Care Management Science, 2007, 10 (2) :151-162
[9]   Environmental predictors of heavy episodic drinking [J].
Clapp, JD ;
Shillington, AM .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF DRUG AND ALCOHOL ABUSE, 2001, 27 (02) :301-313
[10]  
DeJong W., 2002, Journal of Studies on Alcohol, V14, P140