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Journal Article

Citation

McCabe BE, Lee DL, Viray T. Int. J. Ment. Health Addiction 2019; 17(3): 493-501.

Affiliation

Department of Public Health Sciences, Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s11469-018-0036-0

PMID

31602181

PMCID

PMC6786795

Abstract

Normative beliefs about typical student behavior are related to student drinking, but ethnic minority students may not view themselves as "typical" and may not match drinking behavior to perceptions of typical behavior. Data were from 18,748 U.S. students in the Fall 2014 National College Health Assessment. Students self-reported ethnicity: White, not Hispanic (63%), Asian/Pacific Islander (12%), Hispanic/Latino (11%), Black/African American (8%), Native American/Alaska Native (3%), or Biracial/Other (4%). Students self-reported binge drinking (5+ standard drinks) in the last two weeks, and estimated peak %BAC was calculated. Controlling for age, gender, and fraternity/sorority membership, Hispanic/Latino and Black/African American ethnicity moderated the norms binge drinking and estimated %BAC relationships for and students. Prevention and intervention efforts, such as personalized normative feedback, that use drinking norms should be modified for students from ethnic minority groups. Specifically, norms from students with greater perceived similarity-not "typical" students-should be used in prevention interventions.


Language: en

Keywords

alcohol; binge drinking; college; ethnicity; norms; young adult

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