INVESTIGADORES
PAUTASSI Ricardo Marcos
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Coping motives for drinking as a mediator between anxiety and depression, and alcohol outcomes in community Spanish young adults
Autor/es:
GONZÁLEZ-PONCE, B. M.; VERA B; ANGELINA PILATTI; PAUTASSI R.M.; PARRADO-GONZÁLEZ ALBERTO; DACOSTA-SÁNCHEZ, D; CALDERÓN FERNÁNDEZ F
Lugar:
San Pablo
Reunión:
Congreso; 2022 Virtual Meeting of the Latinamerican Society of Biomedical Research on Alcoholism; 2022
Institución organizadora:
Latinamerican Society of Biomedical Research on Alcoholism
Resumen:
Consistent with the medication hypothesis, drinking to cope with negative affect appears to mediate the relationship between mental health and alcohol-related problems, which has been shown in college students. However, there is a lack of evidence in non-university samples that limits the generalization of results. The present study examines the mediating role of coping motives in the relationship between depression and anxiety and alcohol outcomes (frequency and quantity of alcohol use, binge drinking, and alcohol-related consequences). Prospective design with a baseline assessment and a 2-month follow-up. We recruited 334 young adults in the community (mean = 21.1; SD = 2.21) who completed a questionnaire to measure coping motives for drinking and depression and anxiety (Brief Symptom Inventory) at baseline. Eight mediation models were tested, one for each alcohol outcome (at follow-up) for depression and another four for anxiety. The coping motives for drinking mediated the positive relationships between depression and alcohol outcomes, such that higher levels of depression were associated with higher coping motives, which in turn, were associated with higher alcohol-related outcomes. The same results were found for anxiety, except for the relationship between anxiety and binge drinking, which was not mediated by coping motives. Our findings are consistent with the medication hypothesis that "drinking to cope with negative affect" is a critical mediator of associations between mental health and alcohol-related problems in young adults in the community. Training in healthy coping strategies against negative affect should be useful for interventions aimed at reducing alcohol use and their harms.