压力(创伤症状、强迫性检查、仇外心理、危险和污染)和酒精使用独特地解释了人们对酒精的渴望。

IF 1.3 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Andrew Lac
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引用次数: 1

摘要

压力事件可能导致饮酒作为一种自我治疗和应对策略。自我药物治疗假设和成瘾循环模型作为理论框架,可以理解各种COVID-19大流行压力源如何成为酒精使用的风险和状态酒精渴望。该研究假设,较高的COVID-19压力源(过去一个月)会预测较高的酒精使用量(过去一个月),两者都被假设为唯一解释更强烈的酒精渴望(状态)。成人酒精使用者(N = 366)参与了这项横断面研究。受访者完成了COVID压力量表(社会经济、仇外心理、创伤症状、强迫性检查以及危险和污染)、饮酒频率和饮酒量以及对酒精的渴望(酒精冲动问卷和酒精欲望问卷)的测量。涉及潜在因素的结构方程模型的结果确定,更大的流行病压力解释了更大的酒精使用,这两个因素都是导致更强烈的状态酒精渴望的唯一因素。以具体测量为前提的结构方程模型显示,较高的仇外心理压力、较高的创伤症状压力、较高的强迫性检查压力和较低的危险和污染压力对饮酒量有独特的预测作用,而对饮酒频率没有影响。此外,更大的饮酒量和饮酒频率独立地预示着更强烈的状态酒精渴望。研究结果认识到,大流行的压力因素是酒精使用和渴望的线索诱发因素。本研究中发现的COVID-19压力源可以作为基于成瘾循环模型的干预措施的目标,该模型旨在减轻压力线索对酒精使用和对酒精的渴望的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

COVID-19 Stress (Traumatic Symptoms, Compulsive Checking, Xenophobia, and Danger & Contamination) and Alcohol Use Uniquely Explain State Alcohol Cravings.

COVID-19 Stress (Traumatic Symptoms, Compulsive Checking, Xenophobia, and Danger & Contamination) and Alcohol Use Uniquely Explain State Alcohol Cravings.

COVID-19 Stress (Traumatic Symptoms, Compulsive Checking, Xenophobia, and Danger & Contamination) and Alcohol Use Uniquely Explain State Alcohol Cravings.

COVID-19 Stress (Traumatic Symptoms, Compulsive Checking, Xenophobia, and Danger & Contamination) and Alcohol Use Uniquely Explain State Alcohol Cravings.

Stressful events may lead to the consumption of alcohol as a self-medicating and coping strategy. The self-medication hypothesis and addiction loop model served as the theoretical frameworks to understand how various COVID-19 pandemic stressors serve as risks for alcohol usage and state alcohol cravings. The study hypothesized that higher COVID-19 stressors (past month) would predict higher alcohol use (past month), and both were hypothesized to uniquely explain stronger alcohol cravings (state). Adult alcohol users (N = 366) participated in this cross-sectional study. Respondents completed measures of the COVID Stress Scales (socioeconomic, xenophobia, traumatic symptoms, compulsive checking, and danger & contamination), drink frequency and drink quantity, and state alcohol cravings (Alcohol Urge Questionnaire and Desires for Alcohol Questionnaire). Results from a structural equation model involving latent factors determined that higher pandemic stress explained greater alcohol use, and both factors uniquely contributed to stronger state alcohol cravings. A structural equation model premised on specific measures revealed that higher xenophobia stress, higher traumatic symptoms stress, higher compulsive checking stress, and lower danger & contamination stress uniquely predicted drink quantity, but not drink frequency. Furthermore, greater drink quantity and drink frequency independently predicted stronger state alcohol cravings. The findings recognize that pandemic stressors operate as cue-induced triggers for alcohol use and cravings. The COVID-19 stressors identified in this study could be targeted in interventions based on the addiction loop model designed to mitigate the effects of stress cues on alcohol use and present cravings for alcohol.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
6.20%
发文量
64
期刊介绍: The Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment publishes articles reporting research investigations and clinical case summaries which enhance understanding of psychopathology and mental disorders applicable to all ages, deviant or abnormal behaviors, including those related to medical conditions and trauma, and constructs descriptive of personality. The Journal fosters scientific inquiry into assessment, description, and classification of normal and abnormal behaviors, psychobiological factors predisposing, precipitating, and maintaining psychopathology, and theories of psychopathology and behavior change. Studies of normal personality constructs and positive person attributes, person and environment factors influencing behavioral outcomes, and interactive models of cognitive, emotional, and behavior resource factors as impacting normal and abnormal behaviors are encouraged. Within Journal purview are articles focusing on therapeutic interventions, technical notes on instrumentation and assessment methodology, and reviews of recently-published books.
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