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单种族和多种族的美国原住民/美洲印第安大学生的饮酒行为及相关后果。

Alcohol use and related consequences for monoracial and multiracial Native American/American Indian college students.

机构信息

Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University.

出版信息

Exp Clin Psychopharmacol. 2021 Oct;29(5):487-500. doi: 10.1037/pha0000475. Epub 2021 May 13.

Abstract

Native American/American Indian (NA/AI) and Multiracial people (those who claim multiple racial identities) report notably high alcohol use compared to other racial groups in the United States. Nearly half of the NA/AI population is also Multiracial, yet NA/AI and Multiracial college students report different motivations for drinking alcohol. Therefore, it remains unclear if NA/AI individuals who are also Multiracial are at different risk for alcohol use and negative alcohol-related consequences, and if there are distinct patterns of risk factors in these understudied populations. Because college-aged students are at risk for high levels of alcohol use, this exploratory study used the AlcoholEdu for College™ survey to compare the association between initial drinking age, college location (urban vs. rural), and alcohol use motivations and consequences between monoracial NA/AI (N = 2,363) and Multiracial NA/AI college-aged students (N = 6,172). Monoracial NA/AI students reported higher incidences of alcohol use and alcohol-related problems such as blacking out and missing class, compared to Multiracial NA/AI students. Risk factors like earlier age of drinking onset were more strongly associated with negative consequences for monoracial NA/AI students compared to Multiracial NA/AI students. Despite similar levels of Internal Coping motivations for drinking (e.g., to feel more confident or sure of yourself), monoracial NA/AI students reported drinking more than Multiracial students and experienced more negative drinking-related outcomes. These results suggest Multiracial NA/AI students may draw on protective factors not accessible to monoracial NA/AI students, highlighting the need for interventions tailored to students at highest risk. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

摘要

美国的美洲原住民/印第安人(NA/AI)和多种族人群(那些声称具有多种族身份的人)报告的酒精使用率明显高于美国的其他种族群体。近一半的 NA/AI 人口也是多种族人群,但 NA/AI 和多种族大学生报告的饮酒动机不同。因此,目前尚不清楚是否具有多种族身份的 NA/AI 个体在饮酒和与酒精相关的负面后果方面处于不同的风险中,并且在这些研究不足的人群中是否存在不同的风险因素模式。由于大学生群体处于高酒精使用风险之中,因此这项探索性研究使用了《酒精教育大学生版》(AlcoholEdu for College™)调查,比较了单一种族的 NA/AI(N=2363)和多种族的 NA/AI 大学生(N=6172)之间初始饮酒年龄、大学所在地(城市与农村)以及饮酒动机和后果之间的关联。与多种族的 NA/AI 大学生相比,单一种族的 NA/AI 学生报告了更高的饮酒发生率和与酒精相关的问题,如昏迷和缺课。与多种族的 NA/AI 学生相比,更早的饮酒起始年龄等风险因素与单一种族的 NA/AI 学生的负面后果更密切相关。尽管单一种族的 NA/AI 学生在内部应对动机(例如,感到更自信或更确定自己)方面的饮酒动机相似,但他们的饮酒量多于多种族学生,并且经历了更多的与饮酒相关的负面后果。这些结果表明,多种族的 NA/AI 学生可能会利用单一种族的 NA/AI 学生无法获得的保护因素,这突出了需要针对风险最高的学生量身定制干预措施。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2021 APA,保留所有权利)。

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