TY - JOUR PY - 2009// TI - Self-focused attention reduces self-injurious behavior in alcohol-intoxicated men JO - Substance use and misuse A1 - Berman, Mitchell E. A1 - Bradley, Tiffany P. A1 - Fanning, Jennifer Renee A1 - McCloskey, Michael S. SP - 1280 EP - 1297 VL - 44 IS - 9-10 N2 - Both chronic alcohol use and acute intoxication are risk factors for self-aggression (i.e., intentional self-injury) across the spectrum of lethality. Studies designed to identify a cause-and-effect relation between alcohol intoxication and self-aggression, or the factors that facilitate or mitigate this effect, are rare due to the inherent difficulty of studying self-injurious behavior experimentally. In this study, we experimentally demonstrate that alcohol intoxication leads to heightened self-injurious behavior, and that enhanced self-focused attention (self-awareness) attenuates this effect. Specifically, 40 men consumed either alcohol (mean Blood Alcohol Concentration [BAC] = .10) or a veridical control drink, and then completed a laboratory task designed to assess self-injurious behavior. Self-focused attention was experimentally enhanced in half the participants in each drink condition. Results support the notion that prevention and intervention programs designed to reduce intentional self-injurious behaviors should include components that address alcohol misuse and self-awareness.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 1082-6084 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10826080902961328 ID - ref1 ER -