Planned and unplanned drinking to get drunk: A registered report examining willingness, drinking motives, and protective behavioral strategies using ecological momentary assessment.

IF 3.2 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Psychology of Addictive Behaviors Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1037/adb0000909
Andrea L Howard, Megan Lamb, Sean M Alexander, Abigail H M Bradley, Kendra D Carnrite, Marina Milyavskaya, Erin T Barker, Megan E Patrick
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Abstract

Objective: We examined alcohol use and consequences across five categories of same-day drinking intentions and willingness and tested whether same-day motives and protective strategies predicted differences in outcomes across categories of intentions and willingness.

Method: In a 14-week ecological momentary assessment design, undergraduate student participants (N = 196) reported drinking intentions and behaviors over 13 surveys weekly (four morning surveys [Thursday through Sunday]; three midday, early, and late evening surveys [Thursday through Saturday]). On average, participants were 20.61 years old (SD = 1.50; range 17-25), 63% identified as female (n = 124), 29% as male (n = 57), and 8% identified as neither male nor female (n = 15; i.e., nonbinary; transgender; genderqueer; agender). Participants reported numbers of drinks consumed on the evening (past 2 hr) and morning (previous day) surveys. Multilevel generalized linear models tested effects of drinking intentions/willingness categories, motives, protective strategies, and interactions between key variables on alcohol use and consequences in several models.

Results: Rates and quantities of drinking were highest on planned drinking days, and especially high when students planned to get drunk. When enhancement and social motives were elevated, students were more likely to drink and consumed more drinks even on unplanned drinking days, and especially when socializing with others. Effects of coping motives were weaker and sparse. Harm reduction protective strategies were associated with more positive and negative consequences with little variation across planned and unplanned drinking days.

Conclusion: Jointly considering drinking intentions and willingness narrows the intention-behavior gap in student drinking and suggests potential areas of focus for messaging around responsible drinking. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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有计划和无计划的饮酒醉酒:利用生态瞬间评估对饮酒意愿、饮酒动机和保护性行为策略进行研究的注册报告。
目的我们研究了五类当日饮酒意向和意愿的酒精使用情况和后果,并检验了当日动机和保护策略是否能预测不同意向和意愿的结果差异:在为期 14 周的生态瞬间评估设计中,本科生参与者(N = 196)每周通过 13 次调查(4 次上午调查[周四至周日];3 次中午、早间和晚间调查[周四至周六])报告饮酒意向和行为。参与者平均年龄为 20.61 岁(SD = 1.50;17-25 岁不等),63% 的人认为自己是女性(n = 124),29% 的人认为自己是男性(n = 57),8% 的人认为自己既不是男性也不是女性(n = 15;即,非二元性、变性人、变性人、无性别者、变性人)。参与者在晚上(过去 2 小时)和早上(前一天)的调查中报告了饮酒数量。多层次广义线性模型检验了饮酒意图/意愿类别、动机、保护策略以及关键变量之间的相互作用对饮酒和饮酒后果的影响:结果:计划饮酒日的饮酒率和饮酒量最高,尤其是当学生计划喝醉时。当增强动机和社交动机较高时,即使在计划外饮酒日,学生也更有可能饮酒,而且饮酒量更大,尤其是在与他人社交时。应对动机的影响较弱,也不明显。减少危害的保护性策略与更多的积极和消极后果相关,但在计划内和计划外饮酒日之间的差异很小:联合考虑饮酒意向和意愿缩小了学生饮酒意向与行为之间的差距,并为有关负责任饮酒的信息传播提出了潜在的重点领域。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
11.80%
发文量
165
期刊介绍: Psychology of Addictive Behaviors publishes peer-reviewed original articles related to the psychological aspects of addictive behaviors. The journal includes articles on the following topics: - alcohol and alcoholism - drug use and abuse - eating disorders - smoking and nicotine addiction, and other excessive behaviors (e.g., gambling) Full-length research reports, literature reviews, brief reports, and comments are published.
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