2020
DOI: 10.1080/19325037.2020.1713259
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Black First-Year College Students’ Alcohol Outcome Expectancies

Abstract: Background: Alcohol outcome expectancies (AOEs) are associated with college students' varied alcohol consumption. Existing research on AOEs focuses primarily on heterosexual White students. Thus, it is important to explore how the intersection of multiple identities such as race, gender, and sexual orientation influence the endorsement of specific AOEs. Purpose: This paper examines AOEs among Black first-year college students, with specific attention to the influence of gender and sexual orientation. Methods: … Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Consistent with this possibility, we found lower base rates of alcohol use and sexual behaviors in our study compared to other studies of first year college students (e.g., 51.7% of students in our sample reported ever drinking compared to 58.4% from a 2015 study [30]; 46.8% of students in our sample reported ever having vaginal sex compared to 66.5% in the past year from a 2014 study [31]). This possibility is consistent with other research showing that "higher risk" students are more difficult to recruit and retain as research participants [32]. Notably, we attempted multiple and diverse recruitment and retention strategies (e.g., different incentive plans and student ambassadors, to be described in a forthcoming manuscript), but our experience suggests that additional innovative strategies are needed to improve the representativeness of college student samples to help ensure accurate assessment of the effectiveness of interventions on behavioral outcomes.…”
Section: Evaluation Of the Itmatters Interventionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Consistent with this possibility, we found lower base rates of alcohol use and sexual behaviors in our study compared to other studies of first year college students (e.g., 51.7% of students in our sample reported ever drinking compared to 58.4% from a 2015 study [30]; 46.8% of students in our sample reported ever having vaginal sex compared to 66.5% in the past year from a 2014 study [31]). This possibility is consistent with other research showing that "higher risk" students are more difficult to recruit and retain as research participants [32]. Notably, we attempted multiple and diverse recruitment and retention strategies (e.g., different incentive plans and student ambassadors, to be described in a forthcoming manuscript), but our experience suggests that additional innovative strategies are needed to improve the representativeness of college student samples to help ensure accurate assessment of the effectiveness of interventions on behavioral outcomes.…”
Section: Evaluation Of the Itmatters Interventionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Substance use scales were validated primarily among racially diverse samples of young adult men and women. Future research validating scales related to bystander intervention for substance use should intentionally collect participant sexual and gender diverse identities data to ensure that scales are relevant for these populations, which differentially suffer the impacts of substance use (Coulter et al, 2016; Thorpe et al, 2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%