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Binge drinking trajectories from adolescence to emerging adulthood in a high-risk sample: Predictors and substance abuse outcomes.
743
Citations
58
References
2002
Year
Substance UseAdolescent Behavioral HealthHigh FrequencyPsychologyAlcohol MisusePublic HealthHigh-risk SampleSubstance Abuse OutcomesLater Substance AbuseBehavioral SciencesPsychiatryAlcohol AbuseAdolescent PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentAlcohol ControlAlcohol DependenceSubstance AbuseAddictionTrajectory GroupsSubstance AddictionMedicine
The study describes binge‑drinking trajectories from adolescence to emerging adulthood among 238 children of alcoholics and 208 controls. Nonbingers were defined a priori. Mixture modeling revealed three trajectories—early‑heavy, late‑moderate, and infrequent—each associated with distinct psychosocial profiles, and all increased risk for later substance abuse or dependence, with the early‑heavy group at highest risk.
This study describes binge drinking trajectories from adolescence to emerging adulthood in 238 children of alcoholics and 208 controls. Mixture modeling identified three trajectory groups: early-heavy (early onset, high frequency), late-moderate (later onset, moderate frequency), and infrequent (early onset, low frequency). Nonbingers were defined a priori. The early-heavy group was characterized by parental alcoholism and antisociality, peer drinking, drug use, and (for boys) high levels of externalizing behavior, but low depression. The infrequent group was elevated in parent alcoholism and (for girls) adolescent depression, whereas the nonbinger and late-moderate groups showed the most favorable adolescent psychosocial variables. All 3 drinking trajectory groups raised risk for later substance abuse or dependence compared with the nonbingers, with the early-heavy group at highest risk.
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