TY - JOUR
T1 - Precollege and New-Onset College Interpersonal Trauma as Predictors of Baseline and Changes in Alcohol Use Disorder Symptoms During College
AU - Spit for Science Working group
AU - Bountress, Kaitlin E.
AU - Bustamante, Daniel
AU - Sheerin, Christina
AU - Dick, Danielle M.
AU - Amstadter, Ananda B.
AU - Pedersen, Kimberly
AU - Neale, Zoe
AU - Thomas, Nathaniel
AU - Adkins, Amy E.
AU - Thomas, Nathaniel
AU - Neale, Zoe
AU - Pedersen, Kimberly
AU - Bannard, Thomas
AU - Cho, Seung B.
AU - Adkins, Amy E.
AU - Barr, Peter
AU - Berenz, Erin C.
AU - Caraway, Erin
AU - Clifford, James S.
AU - Cooke, Megan
AU - Do, Elizabeth
AU - Edwards, Alexis C.
AU - Goyal, Neeru
AU - Hack, Laura M.
AU - Halberstadt, Lisa J.
AU - Hawn, Sage
AU - Kuo, Sally
AU - Lasko, Emily
AU - Lend, Jennifer
AU - Lind, Mackenzie
AU - Long, Elizabeth
AU - Martelli, Alexandra
AU - Meyers, Jacquelyn L.
AU - Mitchell, Kerry
AU - Moore, Ashlee
AU - Moscati, Arden
AU - Nasim, Aashir
AU - Neale, Zoe
AU - Opalesky, Jill
AU - Overstreet, Cassie
AU - Pais, A. Christian
AU - Pedersen, Kimberly
AU - Raldiris, Tarah
AU - Salvatore, Jessica
AU - Savage, Jeanne
AU - Smith, Rebecca
AU - Sosnowski, David
AU - Su, Jinni
AU - Thomas, Nathaniel
AU - Walker, Chloe
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2019.
PY - 2021/11
Y1 - 2021/11
N2 - College is a high-risk time for interpersonal trauma (IPT) exposure (e.g., physical or sexual abuse/assault), a potent form of trauma exposure. College is also a high-risk time for alcohol misuse, as use begins and increases in adolescence and peaks in the early/mid-20s. In addition, although IPT is associated with alcohol misuse, less clear is whether distal (prior to college) or proximal (during college) IPT impacts alcohol use disorder (AUD) symptoms at the beginning of college and/or changes in symptoms during college. Data were collected from a large, longitudinal study of college students, attending a large public university in the southeast, who had reported lifetime IPT as well as lifetime alcohol use. Participants in the current study were 18.5 years old (SD = 0.46), primarily female (67.2%), and of diverse racial backgrounds (e.g., 53.4% White, 18.5% Black, 12.7% Asian, 15.4% Other). Latent change score analyses were employed to test the impact of IPT prior to college and IPT during college on initial levels of, and changes in, AUD symptoms during college. Those who experienced an IPT prior to college reported more AUD symptoms at the beginning of college and less changes in AUD symptoms during the first year of college. Those who experienced an IPT in the first 2 and last 2 years of college reported greater increases in symptoms in the first 2 and last 2 years of college, respectively. Findings suggest that prevention and intervention efforts for those who experience an IPT prior to or during college may be useful in reducing AUD symptoms during that time period.
AB - College is a high-risk time for interpersonal trauma (IPT) exposure (e.g., physical or sexual abuse/assault), a potent form of trauma exposure. College is also a high-risk time for alcohol misuse, as use begins and increases in adolescence and peaks in the early/mid-20s. In addition, although IPT is associated with alcohol misuse, less clear is whether distal (prior to college) or proximal (during college) IPT impacts alcohol use disorder (AUD) symptoms at the beginning of college and/or changes in symptoms during college. Data were collected from a large, longitudinal study of college students, attending a large public university in the southeast, who had reported lifetime IPT as well as lifetime alcohol use. Participants in the current study were 18.5 years old (SD = 0.46), primarily female (67.2%), and of diverse racial backgrounds (e.g., 53.4% White, 18.5% Black, 12.7% Asian, 15.4% Other). Latent change score analyses were employed to test the impact of IPT prior to college and IPT during college on initial levels of, and changes in, AUD symptoms during college. Those who experienced an IPT prior to college reported more AUD symptoms at the beginning of college and less changes in AUD symptoms during the first year of college. Those who experienced an IPT in the first 2 and last 2 years of college reported greater increases in symptoms in the first 2 and last 2 years of college, respectively. Findings suggest that prevention and intervention efforts for those who experience an IPT prior to or during college may be useful in reducing AUD symptoms during that time period.
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U2 - 10.1177/0886260519883864
DO - 10.1177/0886260519883864
M3 - Article
C2 - 31646942
AN - SCOPUS:85074581706
SN - 0886-2605
VL - 36
SP - 10842
EP - 10852
JO - Journal of Interpersonal Violence
JF - Journal of Interpersonal Violence
IS - 21-22
ER -