Methodology Center, Edna Bennett Pierce Prevention Research Center, Pennsylvania State University, 404 Health and Human Development Building, University Park, PA 16802, United States.
Center on Young Adult Health and Development, Department of Behavioral and Community Health, University of Maryland School of Public Health, 4200 Valley Dr, #1234, College Park, MD 20742, United States.
Addict Behav. 2020 May;104:106267. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2019.106267. Epub 2019 Dec 24.
Extensive research has examined alcohol use context and motives among undergraduates, but less is known about where, when, and why graduate students drink. The current study aimed to describe the motives and situational context of graduate student alcohol use, identify demographic and program characteristics associated with alcohol use motives and context, and assess how alcohol use motives and context are associated with alcohol use behavior. A sample of master's and doctoral-level students who drank during the past month (n = 2091; 63% female) completed an online survey. An exploratory factor analysis yielded two situational context factors: drinking in social situations (e.g., with friends, at a bar) and non-social situations (e.g., alone, at home). Graduate students most frequently endorsed social and enhancement drinking motives. Results of multivariate linear regression models showed that age, sex, race/ethnicity, and international student, marital, parental, and employment status were all associated with motives and context. Drinking for enhancement and drinking to cope were the motives most strongly associated with increased alcohol quantity and frequency, respectively. Drinking in social contexts was positively associated with alcohol quantity and frequency, and drinking in non-social contexts was positively associated with alcohol use frequency but inversely related to alcohol quantity. Graduate students who drink for enhancement reasons and in social situations might be at increased risk for higher quantity alcohol use, or graduate students who drink for coping reasons and in non-social situations might be at increased risk for more frequent alcohol use. Future longitudinal research is needed to explore whether drinking in certain contexts and with certain motivations is predictive of alcohol problems during and after graduate school.
大量研究考察了本科生的饮酒背景和动机,但对于研究生在哪里、何时以及为何饮酒了解较少。本研究旨在描述研究生饮酒的动机和情境背景,确定与饮酒动机和情境相关的人口统计学和项目特征,并评估饮酒动机和情境如何与饮酒行为相关。一项在过去一个月内饮酒的硕士和博士研究生样本(n=2091;63%为女性)完成了一项在线调查。探索性因素分析得出了两个情境背景因素:社交情境下饮酒(例如,与朋友、在酒吧)和非社交情境下饮酒(例如,独自在家)。研究生最常认可社交和增强型饮酒动机。多元线性回归模型的结果表明,年龄、性别、种族/民族以及国际学生、婚姻、父母和就业状况均与动机和情境相关。增强型饮酒和应对型饮酒是与饮酒量和频率增加最相关的动机。社交情境下的饮酒与饮酒量和频率呈正相关,非社交情境下的饮酒与饮酒频率呈正相关,但与饮酒量呈负相关。出于增强原因和社交情境下饮酒的研究生可能面临更高的饮酒量风险,或者出于应对原因和非社交情境下饮酒的研究生可能面临更频繁的饮酒风险。未来需要进行纵向研究,以探讨在某些情境下和出于某些动机饮酒是否预示着研究生期间和毕业后的酒精问题。