Trends in alcohol consumption among undergraduate students at a northeastern public university, 2002-2008.

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Trends in alcohol consumption among undergraduate students at a northeastern public university, 2002-2008.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study examined alcohol consumption patterns and trends at a public university in the Northeast from 2002 to 2008., PARTICIPANTS: Stratified random sampling was used to select undergraduate students enrolled in courses during spring semesters in 2002, 2004, 2006, and 2008., METHODS: Data were collected during regularly scheduled classes for 4 measures of alcohol consumption and 5 demographic categories using the Core Alcohol and Drug Survey., RESULTS: Four groups showed significant increases in both frequency and volume of alcohol consumption-students who were female, over 21 years of age or over, living off-campus, or performing well academically. There were no decreasing trends for any demographic group. These results differ from national college health surveys, which have shown alcohol use remaining steady during this period., CONCLUSIONS: Campus-specific trend data can provide unique perspectives and guide programming efforts. These trends suggest a need for new intervention strategies on this campus.
Publication
Journal of American college health : J of ACH
Date
2010
Volume
58
Issue
4
Pages
383-90
Journal Abbr
J Am Coll Health
DOI
Citation Key
bulmerTrendsAlcoholConsumption2010
ISSN
1940-3208
Language
English
Extra
7 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Place: United States Bulmer, Sandra Minor. Department of Public Health, Southern Connecticut State University, New Haven, Connecticut 06515, USA. bulmers1@southernct.edu
Citation
Bulmer, S. M., Irfan, S., Mugno, R., Barton, B., & Ackerman, L. (2010). Trends in alcohol consumption among undergraduate students at a northeastern public university, 2002-2008. Journal of American College Health : J of ACH, 58(4), 383–390. https://doi.org/10/bmqnjq