尾随保护行为策略介导积极酒精结果预期对游戏日饮酒的影响。

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Journal of Primary Prevention Pub Date : 2019-06-01 DOI:10.1007/s10935-019-00548-1
Amber M Anthenien, Gereon Fredrickson, Nathaniel R Riggs, Bradley T Conner, John Jurica, Clayton Neighbors
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引用次数: 4

摘要

尽管越来越多的证据表明,保护性行为策略与大学生中较低的酒精使用量有关,但我们对学生决定使用这些策略的原因知之甚少。在大学生中,酒精预期结果与酒精使用有关,并且可能有助于他们在饮酒时使用保护性行为策略的决定,而饮酒的环境与大量饮酒的风险增加有关。大学橄榄球比赛尾随是一个高风险的背景,在识别风险和保护因素方面受到有限的经验关注。我们试图确定在这种情况下,对尾随饮酒的预期影响是否可归因于采取或避免保护策略。我们期望那些感知到更多积极期望的大学生在比赛日采取更多保护策略,而我们假设更大的消极期望与更少的保护策略使用有关。大学生(N = 231)在线报告了尾随7天内的结果预期和尾随时消耗的酒精饮料数量,以及他们是否使用了限制消费(即计算饮料,交替饮用水和酒精)和减少伤害(HR;即,清醒运输)策略后48小时尾随。结果表明,较高的积极期望与更多地使用人力资源策略相关。积极期望与比赛日更多的尾随饮酒间接正相关,与通过使用保护策略戒酒的几率负相关,并且对人力资源策略观察到独特的间接影响。这些发现突出了重要的个体差异,有助于使用保护行为,并建议期望挑战干预措施可以量身定制,以解决不安全的饮酒习惯,促进大学生健康。
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Tailgating Protective Behavioral Strategies Mediate the Effects of Positive Alcohol Outcome Expectancies on Game Day Drinking.

Although a growing body of evidence suggests protective behavioral strategies are associated with lower alcohol use among college students, we know little about what contributes to students' decisions to use these strategies. Alcohol outcome expectancies have been associated with alcohol use among college students, and may contribute to their decisions to use protective behavioral strategies while drinking in contexts associated with an elevated risk for heavy alcohol use. University football game tailgating is one high-risk context that has received limited empirical attention with respect to identifying risk and protective factors for use. We sought to determine whether expectancy effects on tailgating drinking may be attributable to the approach or avoidance of protective strategies in this context. We expected college students who perceive greater positive expectancies to report engaging in more protective strategies on game day, whereas we hypothesized greater negative expectancies would be associated with less use of protective strategies. College students (N = 231) reported outcome expectancies online within 7 days of tailgating and quantity of alcoholic drinks consumed while tailgating, as well as whether they used limiting consumption (i.e., counting drinks, alternating drinking water and alcohol) and harm reduction (HR; i.e., sober transportation) strategies 48 h after tailgating. Results indicated higher positive expectancies were associated with greater use of HR strategies. Positive expectancies were indirectly positively related to greater game day tailgating drinking and negatively to odds of abstaining through the use of protective strategies, and unique indirect effects were observed for HR strategies. These findings highlight important individual differences that contribute to the use of protective behaviors, and suggest that expectancy-challenge interventions may be tailored to address unsafe drinking practices and promote college student health.

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来源期刊
Journal of Primary Prevention
Journal of Primary Prevention PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: The Journal of Prevention is a multidisciplinary journal that publishes manuscripts aimed at reducing negative social and health outcomes and promoting human health and well-being. It publishes high-quality research that discusses evidence-based interventions, policies, and practices. The editions cover a wide range of prevention science themes and value diverse populations, age groups, and methodologies. Our target audiences are prevention scientists, practitioners, and policymakers from diverse geographic locations. Specific types of papers published in the journal include Original Research, Research Methods, Practitioner Narrative, Debate, Brief Reports, Letter to the Editor, Policy, and Reviews. The selection of articles for publication is based on their innovation, contribution to the field of prevention, and quality. The Journal of Prevention differs from other similar journals in the field by offering a more culturally and geographically diverse team of editors, a broader range of subjects and methodologies, and the intention to attract the readership of prevention practitioners and other stakeholders (alongside scientists).
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