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Journal Article

Citation

Skidmore JR, Murphy JG, Martens M, Dennhardt AA. J. Ethn. Subst. Abuse 2012; 11(2): 174-191.

Affiliation

University of Memphis , Memphis , Tennessee.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/15332640.2012.675248

PMID

22679896

Abstract

Approximately 50% of college students report a heavy drinking episode in the past 2 weeks. This pattern of heavy episodic drinking places them at risk for experiencing alcohol-related problems. In addition, important ethnic differences exist between European American and African American college students in terms of drinking. European American college students report consuming more alcohol than African American college students, but little research exists on the differences in types and rates of problems. The current study sought to examine the differences in problems among 451 African American and European American college students using a comprehensive measure of alcohol-related problems. The effect of gender was also examined as research has found consistent gender differences in drinking. European American students experienced more problems overall and greater levels of social/interpersonal problems and risky behaviors even after controlling for drinking level. In addition, women reported significantly greater levels of problems in all domains except physical dependence, risky behaviors, and self-perception when drinking was controlled for.


Language: en

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