Publication | Closed Access
Prevention of Heavy Drinking and Associated Negative Consequences Among Mandated and Voluntary College Students.
193
Citations
57
References
2004
Year
Substance UseLmc ParticipantsHealth PreventionSocial Determinants Of HealthHeavy DrinkingAlcohol MisusePreventive MedicineSocial HealthAssociated Negative ConsequencesPublic HealthVoluntary Lmc ParticipantsHealth EducationHealth SciencesBehavioral SciencesHealth PromotionAlcohol AbuseAlcohol ControlVoluntary College StudentsHigher EducationAlcohol DependenceSubstance AbuseMale Lmc ParticipantsAddictionHealth BehaviorPrevention ScienceLifestyle Change
The Lifestyle Management Class (LMC) was evaluated as a universal and targeted alcohol prevention program among voluntary and mandated college students. The relative efficacy of peer- and professional-led group interventions was also tested in this randomized, controlled design. LMC participants showed decreases in driving after drinking relative to control participants. Changes in heavy drinking varied as a function of treatment condition, readiness to change, and gender, with a trend toward larger decreases among voluntary LMC participants high in readiness to change and a comparable though nonsignificant advantage for male LMC participants in the mandated sample. The LMC was comparably effective for mandated and voluntary students, with no clear advantage for peer- or professional-led groups.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1