Risks associated with alcohol and marijuana use among college student athletes: The case for involving athletic personnel in prevention and intervention.

Journal of issues in intercollegiate athletics Pub Date : 2019-01-01 Epub Date: 2019-07-26
Christina E Parisi, Brittany A Bugbee, Kathryn B Vincent, Andrea M Soong, Amelia M Arria
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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to describe alcohol and marijuana use patterns and related consequences among student athletes. A total of 12,510 students (n=1,233 athletes) completed four cross-sectional online annual surveys as part of a multi-site campus initiative. Chi-square tests of independence, t-tests, and regression models evaluated differences in alcohol and marijuana use between athletes and non-athletes. The prevalence of binge drinking and high intensity drinking was significantly higher among student athletes than non-athletes, even after controlling for demographic characteristics. Thirteen percent of student athletes experienced an alcohol-related injury during the past year; this was more common among binge drinkers than non-binge drinkers (20.5% and 2.6%, respectively). Among student athletes, past-month binge drinking and past-year marijuana use were significantly associated with lowered GPA (ps<.01). Skipping class was twice as prevalent among student athletes who used marijuana as compared with athletes who did not use marijuana, but no differences were found related to binge drinking. Components for a training for athletic personnel to reduce risks for alcohol-related injury and academic consequences that are associated with alcohol and marijuana use among student athletes are described. Involving athletic personnel might be an important strategy to identify and intervene with high-risk student athletes.

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大学生运动员饮酒和吸食大麻的风险:体育人员参与预防和干预的案例。
本研究的目的是描述学生运动员中酒精和大麻的使用模式及其相关后果。作为多站点校园计划的一部分,共有12510名学生(n=1233名运动员)完成了四项横断面在线年度调查。独立性卡方检验、t检验和回归模型评估了运动员和非运动员之间酒精和大麻使用的差异。即使在控制了人口统计学特征后,学生运动员的酗酒和高强度饮酒的患病率也明显高于非运动员。13%的学生运动员在过去一年中经历了与酒精有关的伤害;这在狂饮者中比不狂饮者更常见(分别为20.5%和2.6%)。在学生运动员中,过去一个月的酗酒和过去一年的大麻使用与GPA降低显著相关(p
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