Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7260254 | Addictive Behaviors | 2016 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
High-intensity drinking (i.e., women/men consuming 8+/10+ drinks in a day) is prevalent and associated with negative consequences. Occasions of high-intensity drinking have markedly high risk; however, previous research has not examined the predictors of these high-risk drinking days. The current study was designed to examine to what extent positive and negative alcohol expectancies predict high-intensity drinking and whether high-intensity drinking on a given day was associated with drinking consequences and their evaluations that day. Frequently drinking college students (NÂ =Â 342) participated in an intensive longitudinal study of drinking behaviors (NÂ =Â 4645 drinking days). Days with greater positive and negative expectancies were associated with high-intensity drinking. Days with high-intensity drinking were associated with reporting more positive and negative consequences and with evaluating positive consequences more favorably and evaluating negative consequences less favorably, compared to drinking days without high-intensity drinking. Given this, prevention and intervention efforts may consider specifically targeting high-intensity drinking events as a unique phenomenon.
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Authors
Megan E. Patrick, Jessica M. Cronce, Anne M. Fairlie, David C. Atkins, Christine M. Lee,