학술논문

The Association between Distress Tolerance and Alcohol Related Problems: The Pathway of Drinking to Cope.
Document Type
Article
Source
Substance Use & Misuse. 2018, Vol. 53 Issue 13, p2199-2209. 11p. 1 Diagram, 3 Charts.
Subject
*PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation
*ALCOHOLISM
*PSYCHOLOGY of college students
*DRINKING behavior
*NEGOTIATION
*REGRESSION analysis
*SEX distribution
*PSYCHOLOGICAL stress
*BINGE drinking
*ABSORPTION
*ALCOHOL-induced disorders
*PSYCHOLOGICAL factors
Language
ISSN
1082-6084
Abstract
Binge drinking (BD) and alcohol related problems (ARP) are highly prevalent among college students. However, current models examining ARP suggest drinking quantity only accounts for a portion of the variance, suggesting other variables contribute to ARP. Distress tolerance (DT), or the ability to withstand negative affect, is associated with alcohol misuse and may be an important mechanism related to ARP. However, studies have reported inconsistent findings on this association, which may be due to the use of only global scores to measure DT rather than specific DT components. Furthermore, the mechanisms underlying this association remain unknown. Drinking to cope with negative affect has been associated with both DT and ARP, suggesting it may be a mechanism explaining the relationship between DT and ARP. The current study examined the association between specific proposed DT components (i.e., tolerance, absorption, appraisal, and regulation) and drinking to cope and ARP in 147 college students who BD. A hierarchical linear regression was performed in order to examine which DT component best predicted ARP. Four follow-up mediation models were then tested to examine whether drinking to cope mediated the relationship between each DT component and ARP. Appraisal of DT was the only DT component that significantly predicted ARP, in the model controlling for drinking quantity and sex differences. Drinking to cope mediated the relationship between ARP and tolerance, absorption, and regulation, but not appraisal of DT. Implications for furthering our understanding of DT and treatment of BD as it relates to DT are explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]