O'Brien Mary Claire, McCoy Thomas P, Egan Kathleen L, Goldin Shoshanna, Rhodes Scott D, Wolfson Mark
Department of Emergency Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine , Winston-Salem, North Carolina. ; Department of Social Sciences & Health Policy, Wake Forest School of Medicine , Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
School of Nursing, The University of North Carolina Greensboro , Greensboro, North Carolina.
J Caffeine Res. 2013 Jun;3(2):59-66. doi: 10.1089/jcr.2013.0004.
College students who consume caffeinated alcoholic beverages (CaffAlc) are at increased injury risk. This study examines the extent to which a sensation-seeking personality accounts for the relationship between consumption of CaffAlc and negative outcomes.
A Web-based survey was administered to stratified random samples of 4907 college students from eight North Carolina universities in Fall 2009. Sensation seeking was assessed using the Brief Sensation-Seeking Scale (BSSS) (α=0.81). Data were analyzed using linear and logistic regression.
3390 students (71.2%) reported past 30-day drinking, of whom 786 (23.2%) consumed CaffAlc. CaffAlc past 30-day drinkers had higher BSSS scores (3.8 vs. 3.4; <0.001), compared to non-CaffAlc drinkers. Consumption of CaffAlc was associated with more frequent binge drinking (<0.001) and drunken days in a typical week (<0.001), even after adjusting for the BSSS score. CaffAlc students were more likely to be taken advantage of sexually (adjusted odds ratio [AOR]=1.70, =0.012), drive under the influence of alcohol (AOR=2.00, <0.001), and ride with a driver under the influence of alcohol (AOR=1.87, <0.001). Injury requiring medical treatment was more prevalent among CaffAlc students with higher BSSS-8 scores (interaction =0.024), even after adjustment for drinking levels and student characteristics.
Sensation seeking does not fully account for the increase in risky drinking among college students who consume CaffAlc, nor does it moderate the relationship between CaffAlc and drinking behaviors. Sensation seeking moderates the risk of alcohol-associated injury requiring medical treatment among college students who consume CaffAlc. Those with strong sensation-seeking dispositions are at the highest risk of alcohol-associated injury requiring medical treatment.
饮用含咖啡因酒精饮料(CaffAlc)的大学生受伤风险增加。本研究考察了寻求刺激的人格特质在CaffAlc消费与负面后果之间的关系中所起的作用程度。
2009年秋季,对来自北卡罗来纳州八所大学的4907名大学生的分层随机样本进行了基于网络的调查。使用简版寻求刺激量表(BSSS)(α=0.81)评估寻求刺激的程度。数据采用线性和逻辑回归分析。
3390名学生(71.2%)报告在过去30天内饮酒,其中786人(23.2%)饮用CaffAlc。与不饮用CaffAlc的饮酒者相比,过去30天内饮用CaffAlc的饮酒者BSSS得分更高(3.8对3.4;<0.001)。即使在调整了BSSS得分后,饮用CaffAlc仍与更频繁的暴饮(<0.001)和典型一周中的醉酒天数(<0.001)相关。饮用CaffAlc的学生更有可能遭受性侵犯(调整后的优势比[AOR]=1.70,=0.012)、在酒精影响下驾车(AOR=2.00,<0.001)以及乘坐受酒精影响的司机驾驶的车辆(AOR=1.87,<0.001)。即使在调整了饮酒水平和学生特征后,在BSSS-8得分较高的饮用CaffAlc的学生中,需要医疗救治的伤害更为普遍(交互作用=0.024)。
寻求刺激并不能完全解释饮用CaffAlc的大学生中危险饮酒行为的增加,也不能调节CaffAlc与饮酒行为之间的关系。寻求刺激会调节饮用CaffAlc的大学生中需要医疗救治的酒精相关伤害的风险。具有强烈寻求刺激倾向的人面临需要医疗救治的酒精相关伤害的风险最高。