An exploratory analysis of drinking motives and alcohol-related problems among Hispanic college students.

Sarah J Chavez, Nicole A Hall, Andrew Weinstein, Angelo M DiBello, Clayton Neighbors, Kate B Carey
Author Information
  1. Sarah J Chavez: Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island. ORCID
  2. Nicole A Hall: University of Houston, Houston, Texas. ORCID
  3. Andrew Weinstein: University of Houston, Houston, Texas. ORCID
  4. Angelo M DiBello: Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey. ORCID
  5. Clayton Neighbors: University of Houston, Houston, Texas.
  6. Kate B Carey: Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island. ORCID

Abstract

The increase in college enrollment for Hispanic college students warrants increased attention to their health and wellness. Given that a common threat to health and well-being in college students is alcohol use and that Hispanic college students are at elevated risk for alcohol-related problems, it is essential to investigate factors that might lead to heightened alcohol-related problems among this population. The present study is a secondary data analysis of an NIAAA-funded study investigating brief interventions for alcohol use among 583 heavy-drinking college students. Specifically, we examined the relationship between Hispanic student status and alcohol-related problems measured one month later. Additionally, we examined the indirect effects of Hispanic status on alcohol-related problems through drinking motives. Analyses revealed a significant association between Hispanic status and alcohol-related problems at baseline but no association between Hispanic status and problems at 1-month, controlling for baseline problems. An indirect effect of the prospective association between Hispanic student status and alcohol-related problems was evident for only one of the four drinking motives (coping). Our findings suggest that reducing coping motives for drinking among Hispanic college students may reduce alcohol-related problems.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. R01 AA025043/NIAAA NIH HHS
  2. T32 AA007459/NIAAA NIH HHS

Word Cloud

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