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Journal Article

Citation

Martin RJ, Brechbiel K, Chaney BH, Cremeens-Matthews J, Vail-Smith K. Am. J. Addict. 2016; 25(2): 132-137.

Affiliation

Department of Health Education and Promotion, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/ajad.12340

PMID

26824504

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Alcohol-related injuries are a serious public health issue and research has found that alcohol consumption is positively correlated with injury risk.

OBJECTIVE: To better understand the association between alcohol consumption and injury risk.

METHODS: We conducted four anonymous cross-sectional field studies among a sample of bar patrons (N = 917) to assess breath alcohol concentration (BrAC) levels, hazardous drinking levels (based on AUDIT-C score), and past year alcohol-related injuries in Fall 2014. Next, we conducted two logistic regression analyses to predict alcohol-related injuries: one model used hazardous drinking level as a predictor variable and the other model used BrAC.

RESULTS: Among participants in our sample, the average BrAC% was.076 (SD =.055) and the average hazardous drinking score (based on the AUDIT-C) was 5.0 (SD = 2.6). The majority of participants indicated that they had not experienced an alcohol-related injury in the past year (859; 93.7%). Our regression analyses found that each incremental increase in a participants' hazardous drinking score increased the odds of experiencing a self-reported alcohol-related injury by 1.4 times and as BrAC increased one unit of change (percentage), the odds of a past-year alcohol related injury increased twofold (OR = 2.2). Other covariates (ie, age, gender, race, college student status) did not significantly predict alcohol-related injuries in either model.

DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: High-risk drinking behaviors, including higher BrAC levels, greatly influenced experiencing an alcohol-related injury. SCIENTIFIC SIGNIFICANCE: This is the first examination of BrAC levels and alcohol-related injuries in a primarily college student sample. (Am J Addict 2016;XX:1-6).


Language: en

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