| Literature DB >> 31746774 |
Daniel J Fridberg1, James Faria1, Dingcai Cao2, Andrea C King1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Binge drinking, defined as consuming five or more standard alcoholic drinks for men (four for women) within a 2-hour period, is common among young adults and is associated with significant alcohol-related morbidity and mortality. To date, most research on this problem in young adults has relied upon retrospective questionnaires or costly laboratory-based procedures. Smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment (EMA) may address these limitations by allowing researchers to measure alcohol use and related consequences in real time and in drinkers' natural environments. To date, however, relatively less research has systematically examined the utility of this approach in a sample of young adults targeting real-world heavy drinking episodes specifically.Entities:
Keywords: binge drinking; ecological momentary assessment; young adults
Year: 2019 PMID: 31746774 PMCID: PMC6893563 DOI: 10.2196/13765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Figure 1Timeline of the real-time monitoring of a drinking episode.
Figure 2Screenshots of the smartphone interface and sample items from the real-time mobile assessments, including menu-based choices to record contextual factors (eg, (A), drinking location; (B), alcohol quantity; (C), beverage type; and (D), slider-based input to record alcohol responses).
Demographic characteristics, baseline, next-day, and 2-week follow-up drinking and safety outcomes for the smartphone (n=83) and safety comparison (n=25) groups.
| Outcome | Smartphone group | Safety comparison group | ||
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| Age (years), mean (SD) | 25.3 (2.6) | 24.7 (2.5) | .26a |
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| Male, n (%) | 48 (58) | 15 (60) | .85b |
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| White, n (%) | 54 (65) | 20 (80) | .16b |
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| Education (years), mean (SD) | 15.9 (1.8) | 15.6 (1.9) | .42a |
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| % Drinking days (past month) | 47.4 (18.9) | 45.3 (16.7) | .61a |
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| % Binge drinking days (past month) | 23.1 (10.3) | 19.7 (7.7) | .13a |
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| Drinks/drinking day (past month) | 4.7 (1.5) | 4.1 (1.2) | .11a |
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| BYAACQc (past 2 weeks) | 2.9 (2.6) | 3.6 (3.0) | .46a,d |
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| Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test total | 11.1 (4.3) | 11.4 (4.9) | .74a |
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| Duration of continued drinking after the 3-hour EMAe period (hours) | 2.7 (1.9) | —f | — |
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| Additional standard drinks consumed following the 3-hour EMA period | 2.9 (1.9) | — | — |
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| BYAACQ (past 24 hours) | 2.1 (2.1) | — | — |
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| % Drinking days (past 2 weeks) | 42.8 (17.8) | 40.0 (12.0) | .47a |
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| % Binge drinking days (past 2 weeks) | 23.2 (11.5) | 19.7 (11.7) | .19a |
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| Drinks/drinking day (past 2 weeks) | 4.6 (1.6) | 3.9 (1.5) | .06a |
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| BYAACQ (past 2 weeks) | 4.1 (3.4) | 3.4 (2.8) | .44a,d |
at test.
bChi-square test.
cBYAACQ: Brief Young Adult Alcohol Consequences Questionnaire.
dData log-transformed before analysis.
eEMA: ecological momentary assessment.
fParticipants in the safety comparison group that did not complete the next-day survey.
Figure 3Mean (SE) of the mean standard alcoholic drinks (left y-axis) and estimated BAC (eBAC; right y-axis) at each survey time point (bottom x-axis) during the real-world drinking episode. Time 0 represents the survey that participants completed immediately after finishing their first drink in the drinking episode. The number of participants completing the survey prompt at each time point and corresponding percentage of the total study sample (n=83) is presented for each time point on the top x-axis. Drinking and eBAC data for time points where eBAC was ≥0.30 g/dl were excluded from calculations of the means for those outcomes; see the Results section for details. BAC: blood alcohol concentration; eBAC: estimated blood alcohol concentration.