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Active TRAINING, INDIVIDUAL NIH (US)

A daily diary study examining alcohol-induced blackouts among college students using alcohol sensors

$489.7K USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON ALCOHOL ABUSE AND ALCOHOLISM
Recipient Organization Pennsylvania State University, The
Country United States
Start Date Jul 01, 2024
End Date Jun 30, 2027
Duration 1,094 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10899084
Grant Description

ABSTRACT College drinking continues to be a major public health concern in the United States and a priority area within NIAAA. About 1 in 3 students report heavy episodic drinking (HED; 4+/5+ females/males) and 1 in 10 engage in high-intensity drinking (HID; 8+/10+ females/males). Students who engage in risky drinking behaviors (HED

or HID) are at risk for experiencing alcohol-induced blackouts (AIBs; i.e., absence of memory for all or part of a drinking episode). AIBs are critical to reducing harm because they are associated with experiencing higher numbers of consequences and more severe consequences, even after controlling for drinking. A secondary

data analysis of ~800 student drinkers over 18 weekends showed that on nights when AIBs occurred, students experienced ~3.5 more consequences than on non-AIB nights. At least one of these additional consequences were considered to be severe. AIBs also occur at a high frequency to warrant their examination. Our pilot data

showed risky drinking students experienced AIBs on 1 out of every 3 drinking days. Although AIBs are associated with risky drinking, there are many unanswered questions about why and when AIBs occur (which events result in an AIB). The overall goal of the proposed research is to extend the field by using objective

transdermal alcohol concentration (TAC) sensors to increase our understanding of why and when AIBs occur. The proposed study will utilize a comprehensive theoretical model which includes psychosocial variables (e.g., willingness to drink and experience AIBs, drinking/AIB attitudes/subjective evaluations, expectancies, and

norms), behavioral constructs (e.g., self-report drink counts, protective behaviors), and a novel biometric assessment (i.e., TAC sensors) to examine the associations between risky drinking and AIBs. TAC sensors assess alcohol use in near real time measuring features of intoxication repeatedly to provide a curve of

biological alcohol intoxication for every drinking day. Prior research suggests that the manner individuals consume drinks (via TAC sensors) may differ when reporting the same number of drinks (e.g., speed of drinking, time spent drinking). I served as a Co-I on a small pilot study (n=33) using similar methods to support

the proposed research. Students wore TAC sensors and completed 12 event-level drinking surveys over 4 weekends (Thurs, Fri, Sat). The preliminary findings included: 1) high compliance to study protocols (91% retention/TAC use/event survey completion); and 2) 70% reported at least 1 AIB during the 12-weekend day

period, and 55% reported multiple AIBs at a rate of 1 out of every 3 drinking days. These findings are encouraging and demonstrate my ability to carry out the proposed study. The aims are as follows: Aim 1 utilizes a comprehensive theoretical model to examine why and when AIBs occur (which events result in an

AIB); and Aim 2 examines trait constructs (self-regulation and sensation-seeking) and sex as moderators for the associations between psychosocial constructs, TAC drink features, and AIBs.

All Grantees

Pennsylvania State University, The

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