Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts.
Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, Rhode Island.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2024 Jul;85(4):522-527. doi: 10.15288/jsad.23-00074. Epub 2024 Feb 16.
World Health Organization (WHO) risk drinking levels (i.e., low, moderate, high, or very high risk) have been used as a drinking-reduction endpoint in clinical trials. Yet, prior work has not attempted to quantify reductions in WHO risk levels among mandated students, who may also benefit from reduced drinking. We sought to validate WHO risk drinking levels in differentiating students' alcohol-related outcomes, depressive symptoms, and academic performance. Defining risk via typical drinks per drinking day versus drinks per day was compared, and gender differences were examined.
Baseline data were drawn from three intervention trials for students mandated to intervention and who were not abstinent ( = 1,436). Sex-specific WHO risk levels were generated and dummy coded, with low risk as the reference. Regression models examined associations of risk levels with positive Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) scores, peak drinking, consequences, depressive symptoms, and grade point average.
Defining WHO risk via drinks per drinking day evenly dispersed students across categories, whereas drinks per day categorized most students as low risk. More women than men were classified as very high risk across definitions. Students classified as low risk differed from those classified as moderate, high, and very high risk in screening positive on the AUDIT, peak drinking, and consequences. WHO risk levels did not differentiate depressive symptoms. Differences in grade point average were inconsistent across risk definitions.
WHO risk drinking levels differentiated alcohol use and consequences and, therefore, hold promise for clinical use and for quantifying drinking reductions among mandated college students.
世界卫生组织(WHO)的风险饮酒水平(即低风险、中风险、高风险或极高风险)已被用作临床试验中的饮酒减少终点。然而,先前的研究尚未尝试量化被强制要求参加的学生的 WHO 风险水平降低情况,这些学生也可能从减少饮酒中受益。我们旨在通过验证 WHO 风险饮酒水平来区分学生的酒精相关结果、抑郁症状和学业成绩。通过典型的每日饮酒量与每日饮酒量来定义风险,并比较了性别差异。
从三项针对被强制干预且未戒酒的学生的干预试验中提取基线数据(n=1436)。生成并编码性别特异性的 WHO 风险水平,以低风险为参照。回归模型检验了风险水平与阳性酒精使用障碍识别测试(AUDIT)评分、饮酒峰值、后果、抑郁症状和平均绩点之间的关联。
通过每日饮酒量来定义 WHO 风险,将学生均匀地分布在各个类别中,而通过每日饮酒量来定义,大多数学生被归类为低风险。在两种定义中,女性被归类为极高风险的比例均高于男性。被归类为低风险的学生与被归类为中、高和极高风险的学生在 AUDIT 筛查阳性、饮酒峰值和后果方面存在差异。WHO 风险水平与抑郁症状无差异。平均绩点的差异在不同的风险定义中不一致。
WHO 风险饮酒水平区分了饮酒量和后果,因此有望在临床应用中以及量化强制要求的大学生的饮酒量减少方面发挥作用。