Age-Related Changes in Associations Between Reasons for Alcohol Use and High-Intensity Drinking Across Young Adulthood

被引:36
作者
Patrick, Megan E. [1 ]
Evans-Polce, Rebecca [1 ]
Kloska, Deborah D. [1 ]
Maggs, Jennifer L. [1 ]
Lanza, Stephanie T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Michigan, Inst Social Res, 426 Thompson St, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA
关键词
UNITED-STATES PREVALENCE; EXTREME BINGE DRINKING; HIGH-SCHOOL SENIORS; COLLEGE-STUDENTS; DEVELOPMENTAL PERSPECTIVE; MOTIVATIONAL MODEL; PERSONALITY-CHANGE; REPORTED REASONS; MARIJUANA USE; SUBSTANCE USE;
D O I
10.15288/jsad.2017.78.558
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: Analyses focus on whether self-reported reasons for drinking alcohol change in their associations with high-intensity drinking across the transition to adulthood. Method: Self-report data on high-intensity drinking (10+ drinks) collected from the national Monitoring the Future study in 2005 to 2014 from those ages 18-26 were used (N = 2,664 [60% women] for all drinkers and 1,377 for heavy episodic [5+] drinkers; up to 6,541 person-waves). Time-varying effect modeling examined changes in the direction and magnitude of associations between eight reasons for drinking and high-intensity alcohol use across continuous age. Results: Four reasons to drink showed quite stable associations with high-intensity drinking across age: drinking to get away from problems, to get high, to relax, and to sleep. Associations between two reasons and high-intensity drinking decreased with age: anger/frustration and to have a good time. The association between drinking because of boredom and high-intensity drinking increased with age. Drinking because it tastes good had a weak association with high intensity drinking. Among heavy episodic drinkers, reasons for use also differentiated high-intensity drinking, with two exceptions: drinking to have a good time and to relax did not distinguish drinking 10+ drinks from drinking 5-9 drinks. Conclusions: Reasons for drinking are differentially associated with high-intensity drinking, compared with any other drinking and compared with lower intensity heavy drinking, across age during the transition to adulthood. Intervention programs seeking to mitigate alcohol-related harms should focus on reasons for use when they are the most developmentally salient.
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页码:558 / 570
页数:13
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