Why problem drinking during adolescence is never ‘just a phase’
February 16th, 2011 - 3:45 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Feb 16 (ANI): A new study of Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index (RAPI) has found that problem drinking during adolescence is never just a phase.
Researchers used adolescent RAPI scores to examine diagnoses of alcohol dependence during young adulthood and found that more drinking-related problems experienced at age 18 were associated with a diagnosis of alcohol dependence at age 25.
“RAPI is a self-report questionnaire on the frequency with which an adolescent has experienced 23 consequences of drinking alcohol, such as getting into a fight with a friend or family member, in the preceding 18 months,” explained Richard J. Rose, Professor Emeritus in psychology and brain science at Indiana University, Bloomington.
“It might seem silly to even question the existence of a direct pathway from problem drinking to alcohol dependence in that alcohol dependence is clearly the culmination of an escalating pattern of heavy and problem drinking,” noted Matt McGue, a professor in the department of psychology at the University of Minnesota.
“The issue here though is whether drinking in adolescence carries particular weight in the development of alcohol dependence in adulthood. That is, adolescents, because of social factors or because their brains are still developing, may be especially susceptible to the effects of heavy drinking.”
“The key finding was that the more drinking-related problems experienced by an adolescent at age 18, the greater the likelihood that adolescent would be diagnosed with alcoholism seven years later, at age 25,” said Rose.
“That predictive association was stronger in females than males, and was confirmed in within-family comparisons of co-twins who differed in their age 18 RAPI scores. The analysis of co-twins ruled out factors such as parental drinking and household atmosphere as the source of the association, because twins jointly experience these.”
“Certainly RAPI is predictive of later risk of alcohol dependence. This means that RAPI can be used to identify a group of late-adolescents who are at high risk for developing alcohol dependence,” said McGue.
“The innovation in this study is that the authors were able to confirm the association of adolescent drinking with alcohol dependence within twin pairs. Since twins tend to have similar levels of behavioral disinhibition, showing that the heavy drinking twin was more likely to be alcohol dependent in part controls for the confounding with behavioral disinhibition,” McGue added.
The implications are important.
“The first step in intervention is to identify those at elevated risk,” Rose said.
“Screening for drinking-related problems in adolescence may reliably identify many of those at elevated risk for development of alcoholism, and a self-report instrument such as RAPI offers an efficient approach for such screening. Our results suggest that RAPI is not only an efficient screening assessment; it is an effective one, now shown to be predictive of diagnosed alcohol outcomes.”
“While this association may not seem surprising,” said Rose, “the strength of the association, in females as well as in males, and in co-twins who differ in drinking but share their childhood environments and half or all of their segregating genes, was of surprise.”
Results will be published in the May 2011 issue of Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research. (ANI)
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Tags: adolescence, adolescents, age 18, alcohol dependence, alcohol problem, alcoholism, brain science, consequences of drinking alcohol, culmination, department of psychology, family member, indiana university bloomington, likelihood, pathway, professor emeritus, rapi, rutgers, self report, social factors, young adulthood