1. Comparing Drinking Game Motives, Behaviors, and Consequences Among Varsity Athletes, Recreational Athletes, and Non-Student-Athletes: A Multisite University Study.
- Author
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Zamboanga BL, Merrill JE, Newins AR, Olthuis JV, Blumenthal H, Van Hedger K, Ham LS, Kim SY, Perrotte JK, Lui PP, McChargue D, and Piña-Watson B
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Young Adult, Universities, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Adolescent, Surveys and Questionnaires, Risk-Taking, Sports psychology, Games, Recreational psychology, Adult, Motivation, Athletes psychology, Athletes statistics & numerical data, Students psychology, Students statistics & numerical data, Alcohol Drinking in College psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Among college students, student-athletes are at increased risk for heavy alcohol consumption, participation in risky drinking practices (e.g., playing drinking games [DG]), and adverse alcohol-related consequences relative to non-student-athletes. Within the student-athlete population, level of sports participation (e.g., recreational or varsity sports) can affect alcohol use behaviors and consequences, but our understanding of the extent to which level of sports participation influences engagement in DG is limited. Thus, in the present study, we examined differences in frequency of participation in DG, typical drink consumption while playing DG, negative DG consequences, and motives for playing DG among varsity, recreational, and non-student-athletes., Method: College students ( n = 7,901 across 12 U.S. colleges/universities) completed questionnaires on alcohol use attitudes, behaviors, and consequences., Results: Student-athletes (recreational or varsity sports) were more likely to have participated in DG within the past month than non-student-athletes. Among students who reported past-month DG play, recreational athletes played more often and endorsed more enhancement/thrills motives for playing DG than non-student-athletes, and student-athletes (recreational or varsity) endorsed higher levels of competition motives for playing DG than non-student-athletes., Conclusions: These findings shed light on some risky drinking patterns and motives of recreational athletes who are often overlooked and under-resourced in health research and clinical practice. Recreational and varsity student-athletes could benefit from alcohol screening and prevention efforts, which can include provision of competitive and alcohol-free social activities and promotion of alcohol protective behavioral strategies to help reduce recreational athletes' risk for harm while playing DG.
- Published
- 2024
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