INVESTIGADORES
BRUSSINO Silvina Alejandra
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Patterns of alcohol use among Argentinean adolescents: A latent class analysis of their drinking behaviors
Autor/es:
ANGELINA PILATTI; JUAN CARLOS GODOY; SILVINA BRUSSINO
Lugar:
París
Reunión:
Congreso; International Society for Biomedical Research on Alcoholism; 2010
Institución organizadora:
ISBRA
Resumen:
Any attempt to describe and comprehend alcohol use among adolescents starts with a reliable measure that reflects accurately adolescents’ drinking patterns. One of the biggest challenges researchers have faced is related to the procedures that led to a valid and consistent measure of drinking behaviors. In this context, latent class analyses (LCA) offers the possibility to resolve some of these difficulties. LCA is a statistical tool that has been used in the literature to find groups among the data. Specifically, LCA allows to reduce the whole set of data through obtaining information regarding how multiple observed measures are related, and which behavior is underneath these relationships. This method improves the traditional ones because LCA tolerates the simultaneously use of a larger number of variables than the typical questions regarding frequency and quantity. In this context, the present work was conducted to identify different drinking patterns among Argentinean adolescents. Method: Participants were 264 adolescents from 13 to 18-years old (56.1% female). LCA was performed with data from 217 (57.6% female) actual drinkers. The following set of observable variables, frequency of alcohol use, number of standard drinks, frequency of drinking until drunk, and probability of alcohol intake during the next week was used to recognize the patterns of alcohol use. Fit of the different models was evaluated through recommended indices (BIC, AIC, and AIC3). Results: According to the mention criteria, the three-class model was selected, and each of the three outcome classes was labeled as follow: social drinkers, binge drinkers, and heavy drinkers. Each category differs from the others as a function of the probability for various responses on each observed variable. A fourth class corresponding to those who reported they didn’t drink alcohol (47 participants) was added and labeled abstainers. Then, analyses of variance (ANOVA) was performed to investigate differences concerning age and peer alcohol use among the latent classes. Results showed those adolescents who belonged to the social drinking category were younger and also, they reported to have fewer female and male friends that drink alcohol than those adolescents who were binge and heavy drinkers. Discussion: this procedure permits not only to achieve insight of the shared characteristics adolescents within a particular drinking pattern have, but also to characterize their drinking patterns in a more accurate way.