TY - JOUR
T1 - Do Drinking Motives and Drinking Contexts Mediate the Relationship Between Social Avoidance and Alcohol Problems? Evidence from Two Studies of Undergraduate Drinkers
AU - Collins, Jamie Lee
AU - Sherry, Simon B.
AU - McKee, Kyle
AU - Thompson, Kara
AU - Stewart, Sherry H.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Research suggests drinking motives and drinking context mediate the relation between social anxiety and alcohol problems. Study 1 examined coping with anxiety motives (CAM) and coping with depression motives (CDM) as distinct mediators in a self-report cross-sectional study of 263 undergraduate drinkers. CDM mediated the relation between social avoidance and alcohol problems (indirect effect = 0.07). Study 2 included drinking contexts and motives as mediators in a single model and included an additional coping with social anxiety drinking motive (CSAM) mediator in a self-report cross-sectional study of 189 undergraduate drinkers. Undergraduates with high levels of social avoidance drank for both CDM and CSAM, which in turn predicted heavy drinking in risky contexts (indirect effects = 0.09–0.16); however, drinking motives, rather than risky contexts, largely mediated the relation of social avoidance to alcohol problems (indirect effects = 0.08–0.14). Taken together, these results suggest that CDM and CSAM independently mediate the relationship between social avoidance and alcohol problems and might serve as useful intervention targets.
AB - Research suggests drinking motives and drinking context mediate the relation between social anxiety and alcohol problems. Study 1 examined coping with anxiety motives (CAM) and coping with depression motives (CDM) as distinct mediators in a self-report cross-sectional study of 263 undergraduate drinkers. CDM mediated the relation between social avoidance and alcohol problems (indirect effect = 0.07). Study 2 included drinking contexts and motives as mediators in a single model and included an additional coping with social anxiety drinking motive (CSAM) mediator in a self-report cross-sectional study of 189 undergraduate drinkers. Undergraduates with high levels of social avoidance drank for both CDM and CSAM, which in turn predicted heavy drinking in risky contexts (indirect effects = 0.09–0.16); however, drinking motives, rather than risky contexts, largely mediated the relation of social avoidance to alcohol problems (indirect effects = 0.08–0.14). Taken together, these results suggest that CDM and CSAM independently mediate the relationship between social avoidance and alcohol problems and might serve as useful intervention targets.
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U2 - 10.1007/s11469-019-00092-3
DO - 10.1007/s11469-019-00092-3
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85065299478
SN - 1557-1874
JO - International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction
JF - International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction
ER -