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Self-regulation as a protective factor against risky drinking and sexual behavior.

Self-regulation as a protective factor against risky drinking and sexual behavior.

Prior research suggests that high dispositional self-regulation leads to decreased levels of risky drinking and sexual behavior in adolescence and the early years of college. Self-regulation may be especially important when individuals have easy access to alcohol and freedom to pursue sexual opportunities. In the current 1-year longitudinal study, we followed a sample of N = 1,136 college students who had recently reached the legal age to purchase alcohol and enter bars and clubs to test whether self-regulation protected against heavy episodic drinking, alcohol-related problems, and unprotected sex. We tested main effects of self-regulation and interactions among self-regulation and established risk factors (e.g., sensation seeking) on risky drinking and sexual behavior. High self-regulation inversely predicted heavy episodic drinking, alcohol-related problems, and unprotected sex, even when taking into account gender and risk factors. Moreover, in predicting unprotected sex, we found three-way interactions among self-regulation, sensation seeking, and heavy episodic drinking. Self-regulation buffered against risk associated with heavy drinking but only among those low in sensation seeking. The protective effects of self-regulation for risky drinking and sexual behavior make it a promising target for intervention, with the caveat that self-regulation may be less protective among those who are more drawn to socially and emotionally rewarding stimuli. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)

Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 10/24/2010 | Link to this post on IFP |
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Experimental effect of positive urgency on negative outcomes from risk taking and on increased alcohol consumption.

The current pair of experimental studies sought to further validate the role of positive urgency (acting rashly when in an extreme positive emotional state) as a risk factor for impulsive and maladaptive behavior. Previous research has supported the use of emotion-based dispositions to rash action in predicting a wide range of maladaptive acts. However, that research was conducted in the field and relied on self-reported behavior, thus lacking tight experimental controls and direct observation of risky behaviors. In the 2 experimental studies described here, we found that among college students (1) positive urgency significantly predicted negative outcomes on a risk-taking task following a positive mood manipulation (n = 94), and (2) positive urgency significantly predicted increases in beer consumption following positive mood induction (n = 33). Positive urgency’s role was above and beyond previously identified risk factors; these findings, combined with prior cross-sectional and longitudinal field studies, provide support for the role of positive urgency in rash action. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)

Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 10/24/2010 | Link to this post on IFP |
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Social support mediates the relations between role strains and marital satisfaction in husbands of patients with fibromyalgia syndrome.

Husbands of patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (HFMS) report poorer physical and mental health than husbands of women without illness, as well as role strains because of their wives’ condition. There are no published reports regarding the impact of fibromyalgia on their marital relationship. In the present study, we used Lazarus and Folkman’s (1984) model of stress and coping as a framework to examine marital satisfaction among HFMS. We hypothesized that role strains would be related to marital satisfaction, mediated or moderated by social support and problem and emotion focused coping. HFMS (n = 135) and husbands of healthy women (n = 153) completed the Locke Wallace Marital Adjustment Test, the Interpersonal Support Evaluation List, and the Ways of Coping Questionnaire. Only HFMS completed the Psychological Adjustment to Illness Scale-Spouse Version. HFMS reported lower marital satisfaction than comparison husbands. Among HFMS, sexual and domestic roles strains and social support were related to marital satisfaction. Social support alone mediated the relationship between role strain and marital satisfaction, and no variable moderated the relationship. These findings support prior research that shows that these husbands are significantly impacted by their wives’ condition, and suggest the need to focus more attention on this population, possibly targeting social support for interventions. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)

Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 10/24/2010 | Link to this post on IFP |
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Spouses use of social control to improve diabetic patients’ dietary adherence.

We investigated two types of negative and positive social control strategies, warning and encouragement, used by spouses to urge patients with type II diabetes to improve adherence to the diabetic diet. Warning refers to things a spouse may say or do to caution the patient about the consequences of eating a poor diet, and encouragement refers to things a spouse may say or do to promote healthier food choices by the patient. Our dyadic design (n = 109 couples) assessed spouses’ use of warning and encouragement (reported by spouses and by patients), as well as patients’ reports of dietary adherence. Spouses being actively involved in patients’ dietary choices was the largest category of open-ended descriptors of both warning and encouragement. Both spousal warning and encouragement were associated with patients’ adherence to the recommended diabetic diet, with warning associated with poorer adherence and encouragement associated with better adherence. Moreover, it was the spouses’ perceptions of their own influence attempts, and not patients’ reports, that were consequential for patients’ adherence. Patients’ dietary behavior, and ultimately disease management, appears to be best served when the spouse uses more positively toned and less coercive influence attempts. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)

Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 10/24/2010 | Link to this post on IFP |
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Community and school violence and risk reduction: Empirically supported prevention.

The development, implementation, and research of two separate psychoeducational group programs are described. One of the programs, Project FREE (Family Rejuvenation, Education and Empowerment; developed by Paula T. McWhirter and her colleagues) focuses on mothers who have suffered domestic violence and their children as witnesses. The project includes parallel psychoeducational group sessions with battered mothers and a simultaneous psychoeducational group session with the children followed by a conjoint session with both mothers and children. The pilot and the initial studies were conducted in a clinic/hospital setting and later studies in temporary domestic homeless shelters. The second program, GOPEP (Group Oriented Psychoeducation Prevention; developed by J. Jeffries McWhirter and his colleagues) includes four separate school based interventions designed to reduce anger, diminish depression, reduce anxiety, and build positive peer and adult relationships. Each program includes 15 1-hr sessions for classroom group or as a pullout group program. Both Project FREE and GOPEP utilized group process to reduce future problems and to promote well-being and positive mental health. Following program description and implementation, research process and group program efficacy are presented. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)

Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 10/24/2010 | Link to this post on IFP |
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The Incredible Years Parent Training Program: Promoting resilience through evidence-based prevention groups.

This article describes an evidence-based preventive group intervention, Incredible Years Parent Training Program (IY). Decades of research have shown that IY strengthens parent and child competencies and in turn reduces child risks for developing conduct problems and other negative life outcomes. The purpose of this article is to examine IY through a resilience lens and highlight how it capitalizes on group process mechanisms to serve as a model preventive group intervention. Future directions and implications for research, practice, and training are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)

Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 10/24/2010 | Link to this post on IFP |
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