Location-Specific Social Norms and Personal Approval of Alcohol Use are Associated with Drinking Behaviors in College Students
- PMID: 32401105
- PMCID: PMC7518018
- DOI: 10.1080/10826084.2020.1756849
Location-Specific Social Norms and Personal Approval of Alcohol Use are Associated with Drinking Behaviors in College Students
Abstract
Background: Prior research on risky alcohol use points to drinking norms as predictors of drinking behavior. Most research to date has only explored global (versus context-specific) drinking norms as they relate to general drinking behavior. To better understand risky drinking behavior in students, how norms may vary across drinking environments should be considered. Objectives: We sought to explore differences in drinking norms (descriptive and injunctive), personal approval, and alcohol use across specific drinking locations and how these location-specific predictors combine to best predict alcohol consumption in home/dorm locations, bars, and parties. Methods: College student drinkers (N = 115, 76% female) participated in an anonymous online cross-sectional survey in 2015-2016 assessing personal and perceived drinking experiences and attitudes across various locations. Results: Alcohol use, descriptive norms of alcohol use, and injunctive norms of alcohol use (but not personal approval) varied across location. In addition, location-specific descriptive norms were associated with alcohol use in each drinking location, whereas location specific personal approval was associated with alcohol use only at home/dorm and bar locations. Furthermore, descriptive norms and personal approval of drinking in a given location predicted alcohol use in that same location, while norms or approval for other locations did not. Conclusion/Importance: Results highlight the importance of specificity of perceived drinking norms and personal approval for predicting location-specific alcohol use. These findings have implications for interventions, which may benefit from discussions of students' preferred drinking locations and providing location-specific normative feedback.
Keywords: Alcohol use; attitudes; college students; location; perceived norms.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
References
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- Berkowitz AD (2005). An overview of the social norms approach. In Lederman LC & Stewart LP (Eds.), Changing the culture of college drinking: A socially situated health communication campaign, (pp.193–214). Hampton Press.
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