Kenney Shannon R, LaBrie Joseph W
Department of Psychology, Loyola Marymount University.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2013 Dec;27(4):997-1009. doi: 10.1037/a0033262. Epub 2013 Sep 30.
Recent research indicates that protective behavioral strategies (PBS)-previously established as effective self-regulating tools for reducing alcohol risk among college students-may be especially useful for students with poor mental health, who are shown to be at heightened risk for alcohol-related harm. The current study examined the moderating influence of mental health (depression and anxiety severity), gender, and race (White, Asian) in the relationship between PBS use and alcohol-related negative consequences. Participants were 1,782 undergraduate students from two West Coast universities who reported past-month incidence of heavy episodic drinking (HED). Students reported on their drinking, experience of alcohol-related consequences, use of PBS, and depression and anxiety symptomatology. Overall, results demonstrated that among participants experiencing depression or anxiety, greater PBS utilization was associated with significantly lower levels of alcohol-related consequences, even after controlling for drinking and other predictors. However, findings also revealed important distinctions in the potential effectiveness of PBS by depression/anxiety severity and racial-gender subgroup, such that Asian men with poor mental health appeared to garner unique and substantial benefit (i.e., lesser consequences) from increased PBS use. Further, PBS were found to offer substantial protective benefit for White females, irrespective of mental health. This study points to the potential for targeted PBS-specific skills training and interventions to minimize alcohol-related risks faced by the growing subpopulation of college students experiencing psychological distress, and further highlights important race and gender differentials.
近期研究表明,保护性行为策略(PBS)——此前已被确立为大学生降低酒精风险的有效自我调节工具——对于心理健康状况不佳的学生可能特别有用,这类学生被证明遭受与酒精相关伤害的风险更高。本研究考察了心理健康(抑郁和焦虑严重程度)、性别和种族(白人、亚洲人)在PBS使用与酒精相关负面后果之间关系中的调节作用。参与者为来自西海岸两所大学的1782名本科生,他们报告了过去一个月内的重度饮酒(HED)发生率。学生们报告了自己的饮酒情况、与酒精相关后果的经历、PBS的使用情况以及抑郁和焦虑症状。总体而言,结果表明,在经历抑郁或焦虑的参与者中,即使在控制了饮酒及其他预测因素后,更高的PBS利用率与显著更低的酒精相关后果水平相关。然而,研究结果还揭示了PBS在抑郁/焦虑严重程度和种族-性别亚组的潜在有效性方面的重要差异,即心理健康状况不佳的亚洲男性似乎从增加PBS使用中获得了独特且显著的益处(即后果较轻)。此外,无论心理健康状况如何,PBS被发现对白种女性有显著的保护作用。本研究指出了针对性的PBS特定技能培训和干预措施的潜力,以将经历心理困扰的大学生这一不断增长的亚群体所面临的与酒精相关的风险降至最低,并进一步凸显了重要的种族和性别差异。