This study examined alcohol use and pregaming (i.e., drinking before going out) in the transition from high school to college and had 3 objectives: (1) evaluating pregaming prevalence and characteristics during this time, (2) determining whether it represents a unique risk for problematic drinking above-and-beyond traditional measures of consumption (i.e., quantity/frequency: QFI, and heavy episodic drinking: HED), and (3) identifying characteristics of individuals who pregame. Alcohol use and beliefs (i.e., self-reported quantity/frequency, pregaming practices, drinking game participation, alcohol-related problems, and expectancies) were assessed in entering freshmen (N = 1171) with prior alcohol use for the 3 months between high school and starting college. Results revealed that 65% of drinkers pregamed in the past, and most did so on fewer than 50% of their overall drinking occasions, consuming an average of 3 drinks in 27 min and most (87%) drank afterward. Hierarchical regression analyses indicated that pregaming frequency explained an additional 7.0% of variance in problematic alcohol use above-and-beyond overall drinking and demographic risk factors (e.g., gender, ethnicity, and Greek affiliation: R2 = .43 for overall model). Separate analyses indicated that demographics did not moderate the relationship between pregaming and problems. Regression analyses predicting pregaming frequency identified 7 characteristics associated with this outcome including demographics (gender, ethnicity, Greek affiliation), heavy drinking, drinking game frequency, and 2 scales of the Alcohol Expectancy Inventory (AEI: Attractive and Woozy). Findings implicate pregaming as a common practice during the transition to college, and highlight the need for additional studies examining pregaming changes across the freshman year.
Pregaming rapidly escalates upon college entry and students who initiate in college may be at higher risk for alcohol-related problems. Campus prevention and intervention efforts should consider including pregaming in their prevention programming.
Differences in drinking, consequences, and perceptions were examined between alcohol‐using college students by smoking status (current, past, and lifetime nonsmoker). Entering freshmen (N = 558: 45% male, 72% Caucasian, age M = 18) completed a questionnaire assessing smoking, drinking and current health perceptions. Results indicated current smokers drank more frequently, were more likely to drink to intoxication, and had more physiological consequences (e.g., blackouts, coordination problems) than past or lifetime nonsmokers, but past smokers also reported riskier drinking than lifetime nonsmokers. Despite a higher prevalence of alcohol‐related health problems in both current and past smokers, no current health differences were found. Results replicate findings that current smokers are at increased risk for problematic drinking and identify past smokers as another risk group.
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