Literature DB >> 17175900

High-risk drinking among college fraternity members: a national perspective.

Barry D Caudill1, Scott B Crosse, Bernadette Campbell, Jan Howard, Bill Luckey, Howard T Blane.   

Abstract

This survey, with its 85% response rate, provides an extensive profile of drinking behaviors and predictors of drinking among 3,406 members of one national college fraternity, distributed across 98 chapters in 32 states. Multiple indexes of alcohol consumption measured frequency, quantity, estimated blood alcohol concentration levels (BACs), and related problems. Among all members, 97% were drinkers, 86% binge drinkers, and 64% frequent binge drinkers. On the basis of self-reports concerning the 4 weeks preceding the time of survey, the authors found that members drank on an average of 10.5 days and consumed an average of 81 drinks. Drinkers had an average BAC of 0.10, reaching at least 0.08 on an average of 6 days. These fraternity members appear to be heavier drinkers than previously studied fraternity samples, perhaps because they were more representative and forthright. All 6 preselected demographic attributes of members and 2 chapter characteristics were significantly related to the drinking behaviors and levels of risk, identifying possible targets for preventive interventions.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17175900     DOI: 10.3200/JACH.55.3.141-155

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Coll Health        ISSN: 0744-8481


  12 in total

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