Article de Périodique
The impact of friends on young adults’ drinking over the course of the evening - an event-level analysis (2015)
Auteur(s) :
THRUL, J. ;
KUNTSCHE, E.
Année
2015
Page(s) :
619-626
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Refs biblio. :
35
Domaine :
Alcool / Alcohol
Thésaurus géographique
SUISSE
Thésaurus mots-clés
ALCOOL
;
JEUNE ADULTE
;
DIFFERENCE DE GENRE
;
INFLUENCE
;
PAIR
;
ABUS
;
MILIEU FESTIF
Résumé :
Aims: To examine whether young adults' alcohol consumption during the course of an evening was affected by the number of friends present, and the interaction between participants' gender and number of friends present.
Design: Participants used the internet-based cellphone-optimized assessment technique (ICAT) to complete a series of cellphone questionnaires every Thursday, Friday and Saturday evening over five weekends. A multi-level growth curve model (hourly assessments, clustered within evenings, clustered within individuals) with time-invariant and time-varying covariates was estimated.
Setting: French-speaking Switzerland.
Participants: A total of 183 young adults (53.0% female, mean age = 23.1) who completed 7205 questionnaires on 1441 evenings. Measurements Alcohol consumption and number of friends present assessed at 8?p.m., 9?p.m., 10?p.m., 11?p.m. and midnight. Findings Drinking pace accelerated notably over the course of the evening on Saturdays (b = 0.047; P < 0.01). Men consumed more alcohol than women, particularly at the beginning of the evening (b = 0.152; P < 0.05). However, this effect was no longer significant when the impact of friends was accounted for (b = 0.096; P = 0.139). The higher the number of friends present, the higher the number of drinks consumed at a given time during the course of the evening (b = 0.070; P < 0.001). Cross-level interaction effects indicated that this relationship was stronger for men than women (b = 0.027; P < 0.05).
Conclusions: Among young adults in Switzerland, the number of friends present is associated positively with hourly drinking frequency during the course of weekend evenings. The impact of the drinking group size on alcohol use is stronger for men than women.
Design: Participants used the internet-based cellphone-optimized assessment technique (ICAT) to complete a series of cellphone questionnaires every Thursday, Friday and Saturday evening over five weekends. A multi-level growth curve model (hourly assessments, clustered within evenings, clustered within individuals) with time-invariant and time-varying covariates was estimated.
Setting: French-speaking Switzerland.
Participants: A total of 183 young adults (53.0% female, mean age = 23.1) who completed 7205 questionnaires on 1441 evenings. Measurements Alcohol consumption and number of friends present assessed at 8?p.m., 9?p.m., 10?p.m., 11?p.m. and midnight. Findings Drinking pace accelerated notably over the course of the evening on Saturdays (b = 0.047; P < 0.01). Men consumed more alcohol than women, particularly at the beginning of the evening (b = 0.152; P < 0.05). However, this effect was no longer significant when the impact of friends was accounted for (b = 0.096; P = 0.139). The higher the number of friends present, the higher the number of drinks consumed at a given time during the course of the evening (b = 0.070; P < 0.001). Cross-level interaction effects indicated that this relationship was stronger for men than women (b = 0.027; P < 0.05).
Conclusions: Among young adults in Switzerland, the number of friends present is associated positively with hourly drinking frequency during the course of weekend evenings. The impact of the drinking group size on alcohol use is stronger for men than women.
Affiliation :
Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA
Cote :
Abonnement
Historique