College Student Alcohol Use: Understanding the Role of Alcohol Expectancies, Social Anxiety, Social Connectedness, and Need to Belong.

IF 2.7 4区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Mark J Crisafulli, Jessica N Flori, Michael E Dunn, Robert D Dvorak
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Abstract

ObjectiveCollege students consume more alcohol and engage in binge drinking more frequently than their non-college attending peers, and prevalence of alcohol-related consequences (e.g., drinking and driving; taking avoidable risks) has not decreased proportionally with decreases in consumption. Social anxiety and alcohol expectancies, or beliefs about the effects of alcohol, have been found to be significantly related to alcohol use and account for significant variance in alcohol use and related consequences. Few studies, however, have examined how other social variables such as need to belong and social connectedness may fit into existing models of increased and risky alcohol use. Methods: Students at a large state university (n = 1,278) completed an online survey measuring alcohol expectancies, need to belong, social anxiety, and social connectedness. Mean age of participants was 19.65 years, and 59.5% self-identified as female, 39.8% male, and 0.7% identified as transgender. Structural equation modeling supported hypothesized relationships between need to belong, social anxiety, social connectedness, alcohol expectancies, and alcohol use, a mean centered variable that included binge drinking, drinking frequency, and amount of consumption. Results: Positive alcohol expectancies related to tension reduction, sociability, and sexuality, were positively related to drinking, such that increased alcohol expectancies were associated with increased drinking. Alcohol expectancies mediated the relationship between need to belong and increased alcohol use, as well as social connectedness and increased alcohol use. Similarly, social anxiety also mediated these relationships. No direct relationships were found between need to belong or social connectedness and alcohol use, suggesting previous research exploring these relationships may have excluded control variables (e.g., biological sex, race/ethnicity) that better explain the impact of need to belong and social connectedness on alcohol use. Conclusion: Prevention and intervention efforts might be more effective in reducing alcohol use if social factors are more broadly targeted.

大学生酒精使用:理解酒精预期、社会焦虑、社会联系和归属感的作用。
目的:大学生比非大学生消费更多的酒精,更频繁地酗酒,以及酒精相关后果的患病率(例如,酒后驾车;承担可避免的风险)并没有随着消费的减少而成比例地减少。社交焦虑和酒精预期,或对酒精影响的信念,已被发现与酒精使用显著相关,并解释了酒精使用和相关后果的显著差异。然而,很少有研究调查其他社会变量,如归属感和社会联系,如何与现有的增加和高风险饮酒模型相适应。方法:一所大型州立大学的学生(n = 1,278)完成了一项在线调查,测量了酒精预期、归属感需求、社交焦虑和社交联系。参与者的平均年龄为19.65岁,其中59.5%自认为是女性,39.8%自认为是男性,0.7%自认为是变性人。结构方程模型支持归属需求、社会焦虑、社会联系、酒精预期和酒精使用之间的假设关系,酒精使用是一个以均值为中心的变量,包括酗酒、饮酒频率和饮酒量。结果:积极的酒精预期与紧张缓解、社交能力和性行为相关,与饮酒呈正相关,因此酒精预期的增加与饮酒的增加有关。酒精预期在归属感需求和酒精使用增加之间,以及社会联系和酒精使用增加之间起到中介作用。类似地,社交焦虑也介导了这些关系。没有发现归属需求或社会联系与酒精使用之间的直接关系,这表明先前探索这些关系的研究可能排除了更好地解释归属需求和社会联系对酒精使用的影响的控制变量(例如生物性别,种族/民族)。结论:如果更广泛地针对社会因素,预防和干预措施可能在减少酒精使用方面更有效。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
48
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Internationally recognized, Psychiatry has responded to rapid research advances in psychiatry, psychology, neuroscience, trauma, and psychopathology. Increasingly, studies in these areas are being placed in the context of human development across the lifespan, and the multiple systems that influence individual functioning. This journal provides broadly applicable and effective strategies for dealing with the major unsolved problems in the field.
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