Drinking to cope mediates the relationship between depression and alcohol risk: Different pathways for college and non-college young adults

It is well-established that drinking to cope with negative affective states mediates the relationship between depressed mood and alcohol risk outcomes among college students. Whether non-college emerging adults exhibit a similar pathway remains unknown. In the current study, we compared the mediatin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Addictive behaviors 2018-05, Vol.80, p.116-123
Hauptverfasser: Kenney, Shannon R., Anderson, Bradley J., Stein, Michael D.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:It is well-established that drinking to cope with negative affective states mediates the relationship between depressed mood and alcohol risk outcomes among college students. Whether non-college emerging adults exhibit a similar pathway remains unknown. In the current study, we compared the mediating role of coping motives in the relationship between depressive symptoms and drinking risk outcomes (heavy episodic drinking and alcohol problems) in college and non-college emerging adult subgroups. Participants were three hundred forty-one community-recruited 18–25year olds reporting past month alcohol use. We used a structural equation modeling (SEM) for our primary mediation analysis and bias-corrected bootstrap resampling for testing the statistical significance of mediation. Participants averaged 20.8 (±1.97) years of age, 49% were female, 67.7% were White, 34.6% were college students, and 65.4% were non-college emerging adults. College and non-college emerging adults reported similar levels of drinking, alcohol problems, and drinking to cope with negative affect, and drinking to cope was associated with alcohol-related problems in both samples. However, while drinking to cope mediated the relationship between depressed mood and alcohol problems among students, it did not mediate the pathway among non-college emerging adults. These findings caution against extending college-based findings to non-college populations and underscore the need to better understand the role of coping motives and other intervening factors in pathways linking depressed mood and alcohol-related risk in non-college emerging adults. •College and non-college respondents reported similar alcohol use and problems.•Drinking to cope was associated with alcohol-related problems in both samples.•Drinking to cope mediated the depressed mood-alcohol problems pathway in students.•Drinking to cope did not mediate the pathway in non-college emerging adults.•Among emerging adults, pathways to alcohol risk may differ by college status.
ISSN:0306-4603
1873-6327
DOI:10.1016/j.addbeh.2018.01.023