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Reward, Relief and Habit Drinking: Initial Validation of a Brief Assessment Tool

Authors :
Spencer Bujarski
Steven J. Nieto
Erica N. Grodin
J. David Jentsch
Wave-Ananda Baskerville
Alexandra Venegas
Lara A. Ray
Source :
Alcohol and alcoholism (Oxford, Oxfordshire), vol 54, iss 6, Alcohol Alcohol
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2019.

Abstract

AimsAlcohol use disorder is highly heterogeneous. One approach to understanding this heterogeneity is the identification of drinker subtypes. A candidate classification consists of reward and relief subtypes. The current study examines a novel self-report measure of reward, relief, and habit drinking for its clinical correlates and subjective response (SR) to alcohol administration.MethodsNon-treatment-seeking heavy drinkers (n = 140) completed the brief reward, relief, habit drinking scale (RRHDS). A subset of this sample (n = 67) completed an intravenous alcohol administration. Individuals were classified into drinker subtypes. A crowdsourced sample of heavy drinkers (n = 187) completed the RRHDS and a validated reward relief drinking scale to compare drinking classification results.ResultsThe majority of the sample was classified as reward drinkers (n = 100), with fewer classified as relief (n = 19) and habit (n = 21) drinkers. Relief and habit drinkers reported greater tonic alcohol craving compared to reward drinkers. Reward drinkers endorsed drinking for enhancement, while relief drinkers endorsed drinking for coping. Regarding the alcohol administration, the groups differed in negative mood, such that relief/habit drinkers reported a decrease in negative mood during alcohol administration, compared to reward drinkers. The follow-up crowdsourcing study found a 62% agreement in reward drinker classification between measures and replicated the tonic craving findings.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that reward drinkers are dissociable from relief/habit drinkers using the brief measure. However, relief and habit drinkers were not successfully differentiated, which suggests that these constructs may overlap phenotypically. Notably, measures of dysphoric mood were better at detecting group differences than measures capturing alcohol’s rewarding effects.

Details

ISSN :
14643502 and 07350414
Volume :
54
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Alcohol and Alcoholism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....63be29452250e6ecd10478b8d652d4d3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/alcalc/agz075