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Journal Article

Citation

Miller PM, Book SW, Thomas S, Smith JP, Randall PK, Randall CL. J. Subst. Use 2014; 19(3): 225-228.

Affiliation

Center for Drug and Alcohol Programs Medical University of South Carolina 67 President Street P.O. Box 250861 Charleston, SC 29425.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Informa Healthcare)

DOI

10.3109/14659891.2013.779756

PMID

24982593

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Drinking motives are thought to be important mediators of the relationship between social anxiety and alcohol use. This project evaluates whether specific drinking motives accurately reflect alcohol dependence. If so, brief questions about drinking motives could serve as valuable alcohol screening tools with socially anxious patients.

METHODS: This investigation was a secondary analysis of an existing data set of 83 subjects with social anxiety disorder and at-risk alcohol use. The relationship between Drinking Motives Questionnaire (DMQ-R-5) subscales and alcohol dependence was evaluated.

RESULTS: Coping-Depression was the only subscale that contributed to the unique prediction of a diagnosis of alcohol dependence. Additionally, two items (i.e. "to cheer up when you're in a bad mood" and "to forget painful memories") predicted a diagnosis of alcohol dependence above and beyond their association with each other.

CONCLUSIONS: Among patients with social anxiety, two specific questions on the DMQ-R-5 could provide a useful screen for health professionals to predict alcohol dependence. It may be fruitful to specifically target the motives of "to cheer up when you're in a bad mood" and "to forget painful memories" when providing advice during brief interventions.


Language: en

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