Lisa R LaRowe1, Jessica M Powers2, Stephen A Maisto2, Michael J Zvolensky3, Stephen J Glatt4, Joseph W Ditre2. 1. Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, Rhode Island, USA. 2. Department of Psychology, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York, USA. 3. Department of Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, USA. 4. Departments of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Neuroscience and Physiology, and Public Health and Preventive Medicine at SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, New York, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Expectancies for alcohol analgesia (i.e., expectations that drinking alcohol will reduce pain) have been associated with greater alcohol consumption among individuals with chronic pain, and there is reason to believe that such expectancies may also contribute to drinking behavior among alcohol users without a current chronic pain condition. Therefore, the objective of these analyses was to test associations between a measure of expectancies for alcohol analgesia (EAA) and alcohol use among drinkers without current pain. METHOD: These are secondary analyses of baseline data collected from 200 moderate-to-heavy adult drinkers (39% women). RESULTS: EAA scores were positively associated with quantity/frequency of drinking, urge to drink, and other alcohol outcome expectancies (ps < .01). DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Expectancies that alcohol will reduce pain are associated with heavier drinking among drinkers without pain. Over time, such expectancies may contribute to the development of alcohol use disorder and chronically painful conditions. SCIENTIFIC SIGNIFICANCE: This study provides the first evidence that even moderate-to-heavy drinkers without chronic pain may still hold expectancies for alcohol analgesia, and that this may be related to greater quantity/frequency of drinking.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Expectancies for alcohol analgesia (i.e., expectations that drinking alcohol will reduce pain) have been associated with greater alcohol consumption among individuals with chronic pain, and there is reason to believe that such expectancies may also contribute to drinking behavior among alcohol users without a current chronic pain condition. Therefore, the objective of these analyses was to test associations between a measure of expectancies for alcohol analgesia (EAA) and alcohol use among drinkers without current pain. METHOD: These are secondary analyses of baseline data collected from 200 moderate-to-heavy adult drinkers (39% women). RESULTS: EAA scores were positively associated with quantity/frequency of drinking, urge to drink, and other alcohol outcome expectancies (ps < .01). DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Expectancies that alcohol will reduce pain are associated with heavier drinking among drinkers without pain. Over time, such expectancies may contribute to the development of alcohol use disorder and chronically painful conditions. SCIENTIFIC SIGNIFICANCE: This study provides the first evidence that even moderate-to-heavy drinkers without chronic pain may still hold expectancies for alcohol analgesia, and that this may be related to greater quantity/frequency of drinking.