College student drinking, attitudes toward risks, and drinking consequences.

Stephen L Benton, Sherry A Benton, Ronald G Downey
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引用次数: 41

Abstract

Objective: This study examined whether college students' attitudes toward risks explain significant variance in drinking consequences beyond gender, alcohol use, and self-protective strategies.

Method: A derivation sample (N=276; 52% women) and a replication sample (N=216; 52% women) of undergraduate students completed the Campus Alcohol Survey (CAS) and the Attitudes Toward Risks Scale (ATRS).

Results: Scores on the ATRS correlated positively with students' self-reported typical number of drinks and negative drinking consequences (p<.001). Hierarchical regression analyses indicated that ATRS scores explained significant variance in negative drinking consequences beyond college students' gender, typical number of drinks, and use of protective strategies (p<.001). Furthermore, a significant Drinks x ATRS interaction revealed that heavy-drinking students who scored high on the ATRS experienced the most harm from drinking (p<.01). Students with high-risk attitudes showed a stronger link between typical number of drinks and negative drinking consequences.

Conclusions: Even when controlling for students' gender, alcohol use, and protective strategies, college students' attitudes toward risks explain significant variance in drinking consequences.

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大学生饮酒,对风险的态度和饮酒后果。
目的:本研究考察了大学生对风险的态度是否能解释性别、酒精使用和自我保护策略之外饮酒后果的显著差异。方法:衍生样本(N=276;52%女性)和一个重复样本(N=216;52%的女大学生完成了校园酒精调查(CAS)和风险态度量表(ATRS)。结果:ATRS得分与学生自我报告的典型饮酒量和负面饮酒后果呈正相关(p结论:即使在控制学生性别、酒精使用和保护策略的情况下,大学生对风险的态度也解释了饮酒后果的显著差异。
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