Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, 722 West 168th Street, New York, NY 10032, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, 180 Ft. Washington Avenue, New York, NY 10032, United States; New York State Psychiatric Institute, 1051 Riverside Drive, New York, NY 10032, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2014 Jan 1;134:290-295. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2013.10.026. Epub 2013 Nov 5.
Heavy alcohol consumption in HIV patients is an increasing health concern. Applying the drinking motivational model to HIV primary care patients, drinking motives (drinking to cope with negative affect, for social facilitation, and in response to social pressure) were associated with alcohol consumption at a baseline interview. However, whether these motives predict continued heavy drinking or alcohol dependence in this population is unknown.
Participants were 254 heavy-drinking urban HIV primary care patients (78.0% male; 94.5% African American or Hispanic) participating in a randomized trial of brief drinking-reduction interventions. Drinking motive scales, as well as measures of alcohol consumption and alcohol dependence, were administered at baseline. Consumption and dependence measures were re-administered at the end of treatment two months later. Regression analyses tested whether baseline drinking motive scale scores predicted continued heavy drinking and alcohol dependence status at the end of treatment, and whether motives interacted with treatment condition.
Baseline drinking to cope with negative affect predicted continued heavy drinking (p<0.05) and alcohol dependence, the latter in both in the full sample (adjusted odds ratio [AOR]=2.14) and among those with baseline dependence (AOR=2.52). Motives did not interact with treatment condition in predicting alcohol outcomes.
Drinking to cope with negative affect may identify HIV patients needing targeted intervention to reduce drinking, and may inform development of more effective interventions addressing ways other than heavy drinking to cope with negative affect.
艾滋病毒患者大量饮酒是一个日益严重的健康问题。将饮酒动机模型应用于艾滋病毒初级保健患者,饮酒动机(为了应对负面情绪、促进社交和应对社会压力而饮酒)与基线访谈时的饮酒量有关。然而,这些动机是否能预测该人群继续大量饮酒或酒精依赖尚不清楚。
参与者为 254 名重度饮酒的城市艾滋病毒初级保健患者(78.0%为男性;94.5%为非裔美国人和西班牙裔),他们参加了一项简短饮酒减少干预措施的随机试验。在基线时,进行饮酒动机量表以及饮酒量和酒精依赖测量。在两个月后的治疗结束时重新进行消费和依赖测量。回归分析检验了基线饮酒动机量表评分是否能预测治疗结束时的持续大量饮酒和酒精依赖状况,以及动机是否与治疗条件相互作用。
基线时的饮酒以应对负面情绪预测了持续大量饮酒和酒精依赖(p<0.05),后者在全样本中(调整后的优势比 [AOR]=2.14)和基线依赖者中(AOR=2.52)都是如此。动机与治疗条件在预测酒精结果方面没有相互作用。
为了应对负面情绪而饮酒可能会识别出需要有针对性干预以减少饮酒的艾滋病毒患者,并为开发更有效的干预措施提供信息,这些干预措施针对的是除了大量饮酒之外的应对负面情绪的方法。