Fairlie Anne M, Hultgren Brittney A, Lewis Melissa A, Lee Christine M
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington.
Department of Health Behavior and Health Systems, School of Public Health, University of North Texas Health Science Center.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2021 Aug;35(5):577-586. doi: 10.1037/adb0000740. Epub 2021 Apr 15.
The current study expands the literature on alcohol-related protective behavioral strategies (PBS) that individuals may use to reduce risk of intoxication and/or consequences. This study used daily data collected prospectively to test (a) the extent to which college students' plans for using different types of PBS on a given day were associated with actual PBS use and (b) whether drinking intentions moderated the strength of the association between PBS plans and use.
College students ages 18-24 ( = 189; mean () = 20.16 (1.54) years; 48.68% female; 67.20% White/Caucasian) completed eight consecutive weekends of online daily surveys (2x/day; 83.72% completed) and reported on PBS plans/use and also drinking intentions/use. Eligibility included drinking 2 days/week in the past month and heavy episodic drinking in the past two weeks. Three PBS subscales were tested in separate multilevel models: limiting/stopping, manner of drinking, and serious harm reduction.
As hypothesized, for each PBS subscale, afternoon PBS plans were positively associated with use of that type of strategy later that night. Moderation results showed a larger positive association between daily limiting/stopping plans and use of limiting/stopping strategies on days when drinking intentions were elevated compared to days with lower drinking intentions.
Findings indicated that college students do plan to use PBS ahead of drinking occasions, and when students had stronger than usual plans for PBS, they tended to follow through on their plans. It may be beneficial to enhance students' PBS plans in interventions by addressing potential barriers to PBS. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
当前研究拓展了关于与酒精相关的保护性行为策略(PBS)的文献,个体可运用这些策略来降低中毒风险和/或相关后果。本研究使用前瞻性收集的每日数据来检验:(a)大学生在特定日期使用不同类型PBS的计划与实际使用PBS之间的关联程度;(b)饮酒意图是否调节了PBS计划与使用之间关联的强度。
18 - 24岁的大学生(n = 189;平均年龄(M)= 20.16(1.54)岁;48.68%为女性;67.20%为白人/高加索人)连续完成了八个周末的在线每日调查(每天两次;83.72%完成),报告了PBS计划/使用情况以及饮酒意图/使用情况。入选标准包括在过去一个月中每周饮酒2天以及在过去两周中有大量饮酒行为。在单独的多层次模型中对三个PBS分量表进行了测试:限制/停止、饮酒方式以及严重伤害降低。
正如所假设的,对于每个PBS分量表,下午的PBS计划与当晚该类型策略的使用呈正相关。调节结果显示,与饮酒意图较低的日子相比,在饮酒意图较高的日子里,每日限制/停止计划与限制/停止策略使用之间的正相关更大。
研究结果表明,大学生在饮酒场合之前确实会计划使用PBS,并且当学生对PBS的计划比平时更强时,他们往往会贯彻执行计划。通过解决PBS的潜在障碍来加强学生的PBS计划可能是有益的。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2021美国心理学会,保留所有权利)