Unravelling reciprocal effects among young adults' binge drinking, stress, and anticipated regret

Addict Behav. 2022 Dec:135:107432. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2022.107432. Epub 2022 Jul 18.

Abstract

Problematic alcohol consumption represents a critical risk to young adults' mental and physical health (WHO, 2018). As a result, understanding negative consequences that stem from young adults' binge drinking and inter-related factors that may mitigate increases in binge drinking has much to offer scholars and practitioners. In the current study, a two-wave random intercept cross-lagged panel design was used to examine the reciprocal inter-relations among stress, anticipated regret, and binge drinking within a lab-based study of young adults (N = 109, Mage = 19.85). Within-person findings indicated that high life stress and low anticipated regret predicted subsequent increases in binge drinking three months later, accounting for between-person stability in these constructs. All told, findings point to life stress as a robust predictor of increased binge drinking, and anticipated regret as a protective factor associated with reductions in binge drinking among young adults. Given that anticipated regret signalled subsequent drinking reductions, future research should consider ways to foreground anticipation of regret as a protective factor mitigating binge drinking increases.

Keywords: Alcohol; Binge drinking; RI-CLPM; Regret; Stress; Young adult.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Alcohol Drinking
  • Binge Drinking*
  • Emotions
  • Ethanol
  • Humans
  • Young Adult

Substances

  • Ethanol