TY - JOUR PY - 2010// TI - An item-response theory analysis of DSM-IV alcohol-use disorder criteria and "binge" drinking in undergraduates JO - Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs A1 - Beseler, Cheryl L. A1 - Taylor, Lloyd Adam A1 - Leeman, Robert F. SP - 418 EP - 423 VL - 71 IS - 3 N2 - OBJECTIVE: This is the first study to examine the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV), criteria for alcohol-use disorders and heavy episodic (or "binge") drinking in a college sample using item-response theory (IRT) analysis. IRT facilitates assessment of the severity of the criteria, their ability to distinguish between those at greatest and lowest risk, and the value of adding a "binge" drinking criterion. METHOD: In a sample of undergraduate drinkers (n = 353), we conducted factor analyses to determine whether the criteria best fit a one- or two-factor structure. We then conducted IRT analyses to obtain item-characteristic curves indicating the probability of endorsing a criterion at increasing levels of alcohol-use-disorder risk. These analyses were first conducted including current (i.e., past-year) DSM-IV alcohol-use-disorder criteria only and then rerun adding weekly "binge" drinking. RESULTS: A single-factor model of the DSM-IV criteria did not differ significantly from a two-factor model. After including "binge" drinking, two factors fit the data slightly better than one factor but with a dominant single factor. Withdrawal was the most severe criterion, whereas tolerance and "larger/longer" were the least severe. Time spent drinking and a combined social/legal difficulties criterion had the best ability to discriminate those at greatest and lowest risk for an alcohol-use disorder. "Binge" drinking showed both low discrimination and low severity. CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge, this is the first study to examine DSM-IV criteria in an undergraduate sample using IRT. In this sample, abuse and dependence were intermixed on a continuum of severity, and "binge" drinking was in the least severe region.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 1937-1888 UR - http://dx.doi.org/ ID - ref1 ER -