The personal protective behaviors of college student drinkers: evidence of indigenous protective norms |
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Authors: | Haines Michael P Barker Gregory Rice Richard M |
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Affiliation: | National Social Norms Resource Center at the Social Science Research Institute, DeKalb, IL 60115-2854, USA. mhaines@niu.edu |
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Abstract: | Given the prevalence of alcohol consumption and the relative infrequency of harm among college students, the authors sought to determine how most college students protect themselves from alcohol-related harm. An analysis of the aggregate National College Health Assessment data identified a cluster of personal protective behaviors that correlated with reduced risk when drinking. Further analysis revealed that nearly three-quarters of student drinkers regularly employ at least 1 protective behavior, and well over half of the students who use protective behaviors routinely employ 2 or more. In addition, the data reveal that student drinkers employ situational abstinence, with nearly 7 out of 10 students reporting that they sometimes or usually refrain from drinking alcohol when they socialize. The use of these protective behaviors is a strong predictor of safety and harm for college-student drinkers. |
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