Department of Psychological Sciences, William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA.
Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Córdoba, Argentina.
Subst Use Misuse. 2023;58(6):804-811. doi: 10.1080/10826084.2023.2188563. Epub 2023 Mar 19.
Prior research has established that Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) predict harmful alcohol use outcomes. However, underlying mechanisms that could explain these associations are less clear. The present study examined if ACEs are indirectly related to alcohol negative consequences through their associations with distress tolerance and drinking to cope. A sample of 3,763 (71.9% female) college students who drink alcohol from seven countries (U.S., Argentina, Canada, Uruguay, Spain, South Africa, and England) completed online surveys. Path analysis was performed within the whole sample testing the serial unique associations between ACEs→distress tolerance→drinking to cope→negative alcohol-related consequences. Multi-group analysis was performed to determine if the proposed pathways were invariant across gender and countries. Both distress tolerance and drinking to cope uniquely accounted for the relationship between ACEs and negative alcohol-related consequences. Additionally, a significant double-mediation effect was found illustrating that a higher endorsement of ACEs was associated with lower distress tolerance, which in turn was associated with higher drinking to cope, which in turn was associated with more negative alcohol-related consequences. These effects were invariant across countries and gender groups. These findings provide support for the relevance of distress tolerance and coping motives as potential factors in linking ACEs to problematic alcohol use across nations. Our data are consistent with the idea that intervening on distress tolerance and drinking motives could mitigate downstream alcohol-related consequences related to ACEs in college student populations around the world.
先前的研究已经证实,不良的童年经历(ACEs)可预测有害的酒精使用结果。然而,这些关联背后的机制尚不清楚。本研究通过考察 ACEs 是否通过与痛苦耐受力和饮酒应对的关联,间接地与酒精负面后果相关,从而检验了这一假设。本研究共纳入了来自七个国家(美国、阿根廷、加拿大、乌拉圭、西班牙、南非和英国)的 3763 名(71.9%为女性)饮酒大学生,他们完成了在线调查。在整个样本中进行了路径分析,检验了 ACEs→痛苦耐受力→饮酒应对→酒精相关负面后果之间的序列独特关联。进行了多组分析,以确定所提出的途径是否在性别和国家之间具有不变性。痛苦耐受力和饮酒应对均能很好地解释 ACEs 与酒精相关负面后果之间的关系。此外,还发现了显著的双重中介效应,表明 ACEs 的高认可度与较低的痛苦耐受力相关,而较低的痛苦耐受力又与较高的饮酒应对相关,而较高的饮酒应对又与更多的酒精相关负面后果相关。这些效应在国家和性别群体中具有不变性。这些发现为痛苦耐受力和应对动机作为 ACEs 与跨国家大学生群体中问题性饮酒相关的潜在因素的相关性提供了支持。我们的数据与这样一种观点一致,即干预痛苦耐受力和饮酒动机可以减轻与 ACEs 相关的大学生群体中酒精相关的下游后果。