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Journal Article

Citation

Blonigen DM, Timko C, Finney JW, Moos BS, Moos RH. Addiction 2011; 106(12): 2167-2177.

Affiliation

Center for Health Care Evaluation, Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care System and Stanford University School of Medicine.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1360-0443.2011.03522.x

PMID

21631626

PMCID

PMC3208772

Abstract

Aims:  Examine whether decreases in impulsivity account for links between AA attendance and better drinking and psychosocial outcomes, and whether these mediational "effects" are conditional on age. Design:  A naturalistic study in which individuals were assessed at baseline, and 1, 8, and 16 years later. Setting:  Participants initiated help-seeking through the alcohol intervention system (detoxification programs, information and referral centers). Participants:  Individuals with alcohol use disorders and no prior history of substance abuse treatment at baseline [N= 628; 47% women; mean age = 34.7 years (SD = 9.4)]. Measurements:  Self-reports of impulsivity and drinking pattern at baseline and Year 1, duration of AA (number of weeks) in Year 1, and drinking (alcohol use problems, self-efficacy to resist drinking) and psychosocial outcomes (emotional discharge coping, social support) at baseline and follow-ups. Findings:  Controlling for changes in drinking pattern, decreases in impulsivity were associated with fewer alcohol use problems, better coping, and greater social support and self-efficacy at Year 1, and better coping and greater social support at Year 8. Decreases in impulsivity statistically mediated associations between longer AA duration and improvements on all Year 1 outcomes, and indirect effects were moderated by participant age (significant only for individuals 25 years of age or younger). Conclusions:  Decreased impulsivity appears to mediate reductions in alcohol-related problems over 8 years in people attending Alcoholics Anonymous.


Language: en

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