对女大学生酗酒和暴食的纵向研究:羞耻感的调节作用。

IF 2.5 4区 医学 Q3 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Heather A. Davis , Anna Gabrielle G. Patarinski , Samantha L. Hahn , Denise Kesselring-Dacey , Gregory T. Smith
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引用次数: 0

摘要

酗酒和暴饮暴食经常同时发生。随着时间的推移,高水平的负面影响、消极紧迫感和/或羞耻感可能会增加酗酒和暴饮暴食同时发生的可能性。目的:研究(1)问题性酒精使用与暴饮暴食之间的时间关系,以及(2)在涉及问题性酒精使用和暴饮暴食的模型中,共同的、基于情绪的风险因素的加性和调节作用。方法:在8个月的两个时间点对n = 302名女大学生进行评估,我们使用层次线性回归来调查我们的目标。结果:基线问题酒精使用和基线羞耻感独立预测了后续暴食的增加,控制了基线暴食。此外,问题酒精使用和羞耻感之间的相互作用解释了随后暴饮暴食的进一步差异(基线问题酒精使用对后续暴饮暴食的影响在基线羞耻感水平较高时更强)。这种相互关系并不显著:基线暴食不能单独预测后续的问题酒精使用,也不能与风险因素结合。消极情绪和消极紧迫感都没有表现出超越先前行为和羞耻的预测效应。结果支持(1)问题酒精使用是暴饮暴食的潜在危险因素,(2)羞耻感是暴饮暴食的附加预测因子,(3)羞耻感是问题饮酒预测的积极调节因子。结论:在对女大学生暴饮暴食的干预中,解决羞耻感和有问题的酒精使用可能是合理的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A longitudinal test of problematic alcohol use and binge eating among college women: The moderating role of shame

Problematic alcohol use and binge eating frequently co-occur. High levels of negative affect, negative urgency, and/or shame may increase the likelihood that problematic alcohol use and binge eating co-occur over time.

Objective

Examine 1) the temporal relationship between problematic alcohol use and binge eating among college women, who are at high risk for both, and 2) the additive and moderating effects of shared, emotion-based risk factors in models involving both problematic alcohol use and binge eating.

Method

In n = 302 college women assessed at two time points across 8 months, we used hierarchical linear regression to invstigate our objectives.

Results

Baseline problematic alcohol use and baseline shame independently predicted increases in follow-up binge eating, controlling for baseline binge eating. In addition, the interaction between problematic alcohol use and shame accounted for further variance in subsequent binge eating (the influence of baseline problematic alcohol use on follow-up binge eating was stronger at higher levels of baseline shame). The reciprocal relationship was not significant: baseline binge eating did not predict follow-up problematic alcohol use independently or in conjunction with risk factors. Neither negative affect nor negative urgency showed predictive effects beyond prior behavior and shame. Results support 1) problematic alcohol use as a prospective risk factor for binge eating, 2) shame as an additive predictor of binge eating, and 3) shame as a positive moderator of binge eating prediction from problem drinking.

Conclusion

Addressing shame and problematic alcohol use may be warranted in binge eating interventions for college women.

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来源期刊
Alcohol
Alcohol 医学-毒理学
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
4.30%
发文量
74
审稿时长
15.6 weeks
期刊介绍: Alcohol is an international, peer-reviewed journal that is devoted to publishing multi-disciplinary biomedical research on all aspects of the actions or effects of alcohol on the nervous system or on other organ systems. Emphasis is given to studies into the causes and consequences of alcohol abuse and alcoholism, and biomedical aspects of diagnosis, etiology, treatment or prevention of alcohol-related health effects. Intended for both research scientists and practicing clinicians, the journal publishes original research on the neurobiological, neurobehavioral, and pathophysiological processes associated with alcohol drinking, alcohol abuse, alcohol-seeking behavior, tolerance, dependence, withdrawal, protracted abstinence, and relapse. In addition, the journal reports studies on the effects alcohol on brain mechanisms of neuroplasticity over the life span, biological factors associated with adolescent alcohol abuse, pharmacotherapeutic strategies in the treatment of alcoholism, biological and biochemical markers of alcohol abuse and alcoholism, pathological effects of uncontrolled drinking, biomedical and molecular factors in the effects on liver, immune system, and other organ systems, and biomedical aspects of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder including mechanisms of damage, diagnosis and early detection, treatment, and prevention. Articles are published from all levels of biomedical inquiry, including the following: molecular and cellular studies of alcohol''s actions in vitro and in vivo; animal model studies of genetic, pharmacological, behavioral, developmental or pathophysiological aspects of alcohol; human studies of genetic, behavioral, cognitive, neuroimaging, or pathological aspects of alcohol drinking; clinical studies of diagnosis (including dual diagnosis), treatment, prevention, and epidemiology. The journal will publish 9 issues per year; the accepted abbreviation for Alcohol for bibliographic citation is Alcohol.
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