O'Hara Ross E, Boynton Marcella H, Scott Denise M, Armeli Stephen, Tennen Howard, Williams Carla, Covault Jonathan
Department of Community Medicine & Health Care, University of Connecticut Health Center.
Collaborative Alcohol Research Center, Howard University College of Medicine.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2014 Sep;28(3):671-81. doi: 10.1037/a0036303. Epub 2014 Aug 18.
Despite evidence that African Americans are disproportionately affected by drinking to cope relative to European Americans, African American college students' drinking motives remain understudied. Additionally, most research has only examined between-person differences in drinking to cope as a predictor of alcohol use, ignoring within-person variability. In the current daily diary study of 462 African American undergraduates from a historically Black university, associations between episode-specific drinking to cope motives and alcohol use were tested, an approach more consistent with motivational theories of drinking. At baseline, students completed traditional global drinking motive measures; then for 30 days they reported the number of standard drinks they consumed the previous night, and, if they drank, their coping, enhancement, and social reasons for doing so. Students who reported higher mean levels of episode-specific coping motives, on average, consumed more alcohol on drinking evenings. Furthermore, mean episode-specific coping motives, but not global coping motives, predicted average levels of alcohol use. Additionally, coping motives were particularly important for predicting nonsocial (vs. social) drinking. Finally, during evenings for which students reported higher than usual episode-specific coping motives, men consumed more alcohol in both social and nonsocial contexts; in contrast, women reporting higher than usual drinking-to-cope motives only consumed more nonsocial drinks. In conclusion, drinking among African American college students was related to coping motives, particularly among men and in the context of nonsocial alcohol consumption. Moreover, motivational theories of alcohol use may be refined by measuring episode-specific drinking motives that more accurately capture the drinking-to-cope process.
尽管有证据表明,与欧裔美国人相比,非裔美国人受借酒消愁的影响更大,但非裔美国大学生的饮酒动机仍未得到充分研究。此外,大多数研究只考察了作为酒精使用预测因素的借酒消愁的个体间差异,而忽略了个体内部的变异性。在当前一项针对一所历史悠久的黑人大学的462名非裔美国本科生的日常日记研究中,测试了特定情境下借酒消愁动机与酒精使用之间的关联,这种方法更符合饮酒动机理论。在基线时,学生们完成了传统的整体饮酒动机测量;然后在30天内,他们报告前一晚饮用的标准饮酒量,如果饮酒,还要报告饮酒的应对、增强和社交原因。平均而言,报告特定情境下应对动机平均水平较高的学生,在饮酒的晚上饮酒量更多。此外,特定情境下的应对动机平均值,而非整体应对动机,预测了酒精使用的平均水平。此外,应对动机对于预测非社交性(而非社交性)饮酒尤为重要。最后,在学生报告特定情境下应对动机高于平常的晚上,男性在社交和非社交情境下饮酒量都更多;相比之下,报告借酒消愁动机高于平常的女性只饮用了更多的非社交性饮品。总之,非裔美国大学生的饮酒与应对动机有关,尤其是在男性和非社交性酒精消费的情境中。此外,酒精使用动机理论可能需要通过测量更准确捕捉借酒消愁过程的特定情境下饮酒动机来加以完善。