Johnson Patrick S, Sweeney Mary M, Herrmann Evan S, Johnson Matthew W
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2016 Jun;40(6):1339-50. doi: 10.1111/acer.13079. Epub 2016 Apr 30.
Alcohol use, especially at binge levels, is associated with sexual HIV risk behavior, but the mechanisms through which alcohol increases sexual risk taking are not well-examined. Delay discounting, that is, devaluation of future consequences as a function of delay to their occurrence, has been implicated in a variety of problem behaviors, including risky sexual behavior. Probability discounting is studied with a similar framework as delay discounting, but is a distinct process in which a consequence is devalued because it is uncertain or probabilistic.
Twenty-three, nondependent alcohol users (13 male, 10 female; mean age = 25.3 years old) orally consumed alcohol (1 g/kg) or placebo in 2 separate experimental sessions. During sessions, participants completed tasks examining delay and probability discounting of hypothetical condom-protected sex (Sexual Delay Discounting Task, Sexual Probability Discounting Task) and of hypothetical and real money.
Alcohol decreased the likelihood that participants would wait to have condom-protected sex versus having immediate, unprotected sex. Alcohol also decreased the likelihood that participants would use an immediately available condom given a specified level of sexually transmitted infection (STI) risk. Alcohol did not affect delay discounting of money, but it did increase participants' preferences for larger, probabilistic monetary rewards over smaller, certain rewards.
Acute, binge-level alcohol intoxication may increase sexual HIV risk by decreasing willingness to delay sex in order to acquire a condom in situations where one is not immediately available, and by decreasing sensitivity to perceived risk of STI contraction. These findings suggest that delay and probability discounting are critical, but heretofore unrecognized, processes that may mediate the relations between alcohol use and HIV risk.
饮酒,尤其是暴饮,与感染艾滋病毒的性风险行为有关,但酒精增加性风险行为的机制尚未得到充分研究。延迟折扣,即根据未来结果出现的延迟对其进行贬值,已被认为与包括危险性行为在内的多种问题行为有关。概率折扣的研究框架与延迟折扣相似,但它是一个不同的过程,在这个过程中,一个结果因其不确定或具有概率性而被贬值。
23名非依赖性饮酒者(13名男性,10名女性;平均年龄 = 25.3岁)在两个单独的实验环节中口服酒精(1克/千克)或安慰剂。在实验环节中,参与者完成了一些任务,这些任务考察了对假设的有避孕套保护的性行为(性延迟折扣任务、性概率折扣任务)以及假设的和真实金钱的延迟和概率折扣。
与立即进行无保护性行为相比,酒精降低了参与者等待进行有避孕套保护的性行为的可能性。在给定特定性传播感染(STI)风险水平的情况下,酒精也降低了参与者使用即时可用避孕套的可能性。酒精不影响对金钱的延迟折扣,但它确实增加了参与者对更大的概率性金钱奖励而非更小的确定性奖励的偏好。
急性暴饮水平的酒精中毒可能会增加感染艾滋病毒的性风险,这是通过在没有即时可用避孕套的情况下,降低为了获得避孕套而延迟性行为的意愿,以及降低对感知到的性传播感染风险的敏感度来实现的。这些发现表明,延迟和概率折扣是关键的,但迄今为止尚未被认识到的过程,它们可能介导了饮酒与艾滋病毒风险之间的关系。