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Transitioning into and out of large-effect drinking in young adulthood.
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2001
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Substance UseFamily HistoryPsychologyAlcohol MisuseTransition To AdulthoodDevelopmental PsychologyPublic HealthHealth SciencesBehavioral SciencesAlcohol AbuseAdolescent DevelopmentAlcohol ControlAlcohol DependenceYoung AdulthoodSubstance AbuseLatent Transition AnalysisAlcohol StudiesAddictionSubstance AddictionAlcohol Involvement
As individuals age beyond the college years into young adulthood, many exhibit a tendency to moderate or "mature out of" alcohol involvement. The current study classified effect-drinking statuses in young adults and examined transitions among statuses using latent transition analysis, a latent variable state-sequential model for longitudinal data. At 3 occasions over 7 years (Years 1, 4, and 7), 443 men (47%) and women (mean age of both at baseline = 18.5 years; 51% with family history of alcoholism) responded to 3 past-30-day items assessing drinking and subjective effects of drinking: whether the respondent drank alcohol, felt high, and felt drunk. Latent statuses included abstainers (14% at Year 1), limited-effect drinkers (8%), moderate-effect drinkers (23%), and large-effect drinkers (54%). Respondents with family history of alcoholism were less likely to transition out of large-effect drinking than those without family history. Men exhibited more severe initial effect-drinking statuses and lower transition probabilities into less severe effect-drinking statuses than women.