The Link Between Planning and Doing: Daily-Level Associations Between College Students' Plans for and Use of Alcohol-Related Protective Behavioral Strategies

Objective: The current study expands the literature on alcohol-related protective behavioral strategies (PBS) that individuals may use to reduce risk of intoxication and/or consequences. This study used daily data collected prospectively to test (a) the extent to which college students' plans f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychology of addictive behaviors 2021-08, Vol.35 (5), p.577-586
Hauptverfasser: Fairlie, Anne M., Hultgren, Brittney A., Lewis, Melissa A., Lee, Christine M.
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container_end_page 586
container_issue 5
container_start_page 577
container_title Psychology of addictive behaviors
container_volume 35
creator Fairlie, Anne M.
Hultgren, Brittney A.
Lewis, Melissa A.
Lee, Christine M.
description Objective: The current study expands the literature on alcohol-related protective behavioral strategies (PBS) that individuals may use to reduce risk of intoxication and/or consequences. This study used daily data collected prospectively to test (a) the extent to which college students' plans for using different types of PBS on a given day were associated with actual PBS use and (b) whether drinking intentions moderated the strength of the association between PBS plans and use. Method: College students ages 18-24 (N = 189; mean (SD) = 20.16 (1.54) years; 48.68% female; 67.20% White/Caucasian) completed eight consecutive weekends of online daily surveys (2x/day; 83.72% completed) and reported on PBS plans/use and also drinking intentions/use. Eligibility included drinking 2 days/week in the past month and heavy episodic drinking in the past two weeks. Three PBS subscales were tested in separate multilevel models: limiting/stopping, manner of drinking, and serious harm reduction. Results: As hypothesized, for each PBS subscale, afternoon PBS plans were positively associated with use of that type of strategy later that night. Moderation results showed a larger positive association between daily limiting/stopping plans and use of limiting/stopping strategies on days when drinking intentions were elevated compared to days with lower drinking intentions. Conclusions: Findings indicated that college students do plan to use PBS ahead of drinking occasions, and when students had stronger than usual plans for PBS, they tended to follow through on their plans. It may be beneficial to enhance students' PBS plans in interventions by addressing potential barriers to PBS. Public Health Significance This study underscores the need to focus on how and why young adults may plan (or not plan) to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., spacing drinks, having a designated driver) in order to reduce their alcohol intoxication and consequences. By enhancing our understanding of young adults' decisions to implement protective behavioral strategies, we may be able to reduce the level of intoxication and alcohol-related negative consequences experienced among young adults through more informed alcohol interventions.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/adb0000740
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This study used daily data collected prospectively to test (a) the extent to which college students' plans for using different types of PBS on a given day were associated with actual PBS use and (b) whether drinking intentions moderated the strength of the association between PBS plans and use. Method: College students ages 18-24 (N = 189; mean (SD) = 20.16 (1.54) years; 48.68% female; 67.20% White/Caucasian) completed eight consecutive weekends of online daily surveys (2x/day; 83.72% completed) and reported on PBS plans/use and also drinking intentions/use. Eligibility included drinking 2 days/week in the past month and heavy episodic drinking in the past two weeks. Three PBS subscales were tested in separate multilevel models: limiting/stopping, manner of drinking, and serious harm reduction. Results: As hypothesized, for each PBS subscale, afternoon PBS plans were positively associated with use of that type of strategy later that night. Moderation results showed a larger positive association between daily limiting/stopping plans and use of limiting/stopping strategies on days when drinking intentions were elevated compared to days with lower drinking intentions. Conclusions: Findings indicated that college students do plan to use PBS ahead of drinking occasions, and when students had stronger than usual plans for PBS, they tended to follow through on their plans. It may be beneficial to enhance students' PBS plans in interventions by addressing potential barriers to PBS. Public Health Significance This study underscores the need to focus on how and why young adults may plan (or not plan) to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., spacing drinks, having a designated driver) in order to reduce their alcohol intoxication and consequences. By enhancing our understanding of young adults' decisions to implement protective behavioral strategies, we may be able to reduce the level of intoxication and alcohol-related negative consequences experienced among young adults through more informed alcohol interventions.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0893-164X</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1939-1501</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1037/adb0000740</identifier><identifier>PMID: 33856838</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>United States: American Psychological Association</publisher><subject>Alcohol Use ; Behavioral Intention ; College Students ; Drinking behavior ; Female ; Harm Reduction ; Human ; Intention ; Intoxication ; Male ; Moderation ; Protective Behavioral Strategies ; Protective factors ; Risk reduction ; Strategies ; Surveys ; Treatment Barriers</subject><ispartof>Psychology of addictive behaviors, 2021-08, Vol.35 (5), p.577-586</ispartof><rights>2021 American Psychological Association</rights><rights>2021, American Psychological Association</rights><rights>Copyright American Psychological Association Aug 2021</rights><lds50>peer_reviewed</lds50><oa>free_for_read</oa><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed><citedby>FETCH-LOGICAL-a470t-fb410cc72cf3d3fe946e8191c486add72e4688154d2da8e2e8b840e676b0bb103</citedby><orcidid>0000-0002-6134-5753 ; 0000-0002-7181-5050</orcidid></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><link.rule.ids>230,314,778,782,883,27907,27908,30982</link.rule.ids><backlink>$$Uhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33856838$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed$$Hfree_for_read</backlink></links><search><contributor>Witkiewitz, Katie</contributor><creatorcontrib>Fairlie, Anne M.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Hultgren, Brittney A.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Lewis, Melissa A.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Lee, Christine M.</creatorcontrib><title>The Link Between Planning and Doing: Daily-Level Associations Between College Students' Plans for and Use of Alcohol-Related Protective Behavioral Strategies</title><title>Psychology of addictive behaviors</title><addtitle>Psychol Addict Behav</addtitle><description>Objective: The current study expands the literature on alcohol-related protective behavioral strategies (PBS) that individuals may use to reduce risk of intoxication and/or consequences. This study used daily data collected prospectively to test (a) the extent to which college students' plans for using different types of PBS on a given day were associated with actual PBS use and (b) whether drinking intentions moderated the strength of the association between PBS plans and use. Method: College students ages 18-24 (N = 189; mean (SD) = 20.16 (1.54) years; 48.68% female; 67.20% White/Caucasian) completed eight consecutive weekends of online daily surveys (2x/day; 83.72% completed) and reported on PBS plans/use and also drinking intentions/use. Eligibility included drinking 2 days/week in the past month and heavy episodic drinking in the past two weeks. Three PBS subscales were tested in separate multilevel models: limiting/stopping, manner of drinking, and serious harm reduction. Results: As hypothesized, for each PBS subscale, afternoon PBS plans were positively associated with use of that type of strategy later that night. Moderation results showed a larger positive association between daily limiting/stopping plans and use of limiting/stopping strategies on days when drinking intentions were elevated compared to days with lower drinking intentions. Conclusions: Findings indicated that college students do plan to use PBS ahead of drinking occasions, and when students had stronger than usual plans for PBS, they tended to follow through on their plans. It may be beneficial to enhance students' PBS plans in interventions by addressing potential barriers to PBS. Public Health Significance This study underscores the need to focus on how and why young adults may plan (or not plan) to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., spacing drinks, having a designated driver) in order to reduce their alcohol intoxication and consequences. 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This study used daily data collected prospectively to test (a) the extent to which college students' plans for using different types of PBS on a given day were associated with actual PBS use and (b) whether drinking intentions moderated the strength of the association between PBS plans and use. Method: College students ages 18-24 (N = 189; mean (SD) = 20.16 (1.54) years; 48.68% female; 67.20% White/Caucasian) completed eight consecutive weekends of online daily surveys (2x/day; 83.72% completed) and reported on PBS plans/use and also drinking intentions/use. Eligibility included drinking 2 days/week in the past month and heavy episodic drinking in the past two weeks. Three PBS subscales were tested in separate multilevel models: limiting/stopping, manner of drinking, and serious harm reduction. Results: As hypothesized, for each PBS subscale, afternoon PBS plans were positively associated with use of that type of strategy later that night. Moderation results showed a larger positive association between daily limiting/stopping plans and use of limiting/stopping strategies on days when drinking intentions were elevated compared to days with lower drinking intentions. Conclusions: Findings indicated that college students do plan to use PBS ahead of drinking occasions, and when students had stronger than usual plans for PBS, they tended to follow through on their plans. It may be beneficial to enhance students' PBS plans in interventions by addressing potential barriers to PBS. Public Health Significance This study underscores the need to focus on how and why young adults may plan (or not plan) to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., spacing drinks, having a designated driver) in order to reduce their alcohol intoxication and consequences. 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subjects Alcohol Use
Behavioral Intention
College Students
Drinking behavior
Female
Harm Reduction
Human
Intention
Intoxication
Male
Moderation
Protective Behavioral Strategies
Protective factors
Risk reduction
Strategies
Surveys
Treatment Barriers
title The Link Between Planning and Doing: Daily-Level Associations Between College Students' Plans for and Use of Alcohol-Related Protective Behavioral Strategies
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