1. Personality Risk Factors and Readiness to Change in Mandated and Voluntary College Students Enrolled in an Alcohol Intervention Program.
- Author
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Kazemi, Donna M., Levine, Maureen J., Dmochowski, Jacek, Angbing, Irene, and Shou, Qiong
- Subjects
PREVENTION of alcoholism ,ANALYSIS of variance ,BEHAVIOR modification ,CHI-squared test ,COLLEGE students ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DRINKING behavior ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PERSONALITY ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SEX distribution ,T-test (Statistics) ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis ,TREATMENT programs ,REPEATED measures design ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This study compared personality risk factors and readiness to change drinking behavior among mandated and volunteer college students. The sample ( N = 583) completed three measures of motivation to change and personality risk factors at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months between 2011 and 2012. Linear mixed models were used to determine an association of continuous outcome variable(s) with covariates over time. Participants in the action stage had lower impulsivity scores. Gender was significant, with females showing the highest anxiety and lowest sensation seeking. The findings indicate a number of future directions to advance innovative alcohol intervention and treatment programs on college campuses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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