A Scoping Review of Determinants of Drinking and Driving Behavior among Young Adult College Students in the US
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Determinants of Drinking and Driving among College Students
1.2. Current Review
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Article Screening and Data Collection
3. Results
3.1. Intrapersonal/Psychological
3.2. Interpersonal/Social
3.3. Environmental
3.4. Policy Related
4. Discussion
4.1. Implications for Research and Practice
4.2. Limitations of Existing Research
4.3. Limitations of the Review
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author, Year | Sample Population | Study Design | Thematic Domain | Salient Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|
Arria et al., 2011 [23] | N = 1194 | Prospective Study | Environmental Interpersonal/Social | Half of the drugged drivers’ were DAD. Both drugged and drunk driving were independently associated with an increased risk of alcohol consumption. |
Arria et al., 2016 [24] | N = 1000 | Longitudinal study | Intrapersonal/Psychological Interpersonal/Social Environmental | More than half (57%) consumed energy drinks (EDs) at least once during the past year. Among ED consumers, 71% drank alcohol mixed with energy drinks (AmEDs) and 85% drank EDs alone; many (56%) engaged in both styles of ED consumption, while others specialized in one or the other (29%) or drank EDs alone exclusively, while 15% drank AmEDs exclusively. After accounting for other risk factors, ED consumption was associated with drunk driving frequency in 2 ways. First, a direct path existed from ED frequency (without alcohol) to drunk driving frequency. Second, an indirect path existed from AmED frequency through alcohol quantity to drunk driving frequency. |
Amlung et al., 2016 [25] | N = 134 | Cross-sectional study | Policy | Drunk drivers were more likely to be males (p < 0.001) but did not differ from their passengers in terms of age or drinking behavior (p > 0.05). |
Bastien et al., 2019 [26] | N = 114,816 | Longitudinal study | Interpersonal/Social | Self-reported difficulties sleeping, insomnia symptoms, and insufficient sleep are associated with DAD. This relationship is stronger among student athletes than non-student athletes. |
Caldeira et al., 2017 [27] | N = 1243 | Longitudinal study | Interpersonal/Social | Yearly prevalence increased at age 21 for DWI (24.3%) and 19.1%. DAD increased significantly during college. Marijuana mostly facilitates DAD. |
Fairlie et al., 2010 [28] | N = 330 | Cross-sectional study | Intrapersonal/Psychological Policy Interpersonal/Social | Higher levels of weekly alcohol use, being aged 21 or older, and perceived difficulty in obtaining alternative transportation were associated with a greater likelihood of DAD. In addition, perceived likelihood of drinking and driving-related consequences was associated with a lower likelihood of drinking and driving. Knowledge of the 0.08% per se and zero tolerance laws did not predict alcohol-impaired driving. |
Fromme et al., 2010 [29] | N = 1817 | Longitudinal study | Policy | Drinking and driving showed a 72% relative increase in the 2 weeks after turning 21. |
Hultgren et al., 2021 [30] | N = 367 | Cross-sectional study | Environmental | Of the 147 students reporting alcohol use, 4.6% reported at least one occasion of driving under the influence, and 7.4% reported at least riding with an impaired driver. t-test results showed no differences by age; p = 0.50. |
Kenney et al., 2013 [31] | N = 2848 | Cross-sectional study | Interpersonal/Social | Men were more likely to participate in DAD than women (p-value < 0.001). Students 21+ years were also more likely to participate in DAD than younger students (p-value < 0.001). Caucasians compared to non-Caucasians (p-value < 0.001) and students with a family history of alcohol abuse were also likely to participate in DAD compared with those without a family history alcohol abuse (p-value < 0.001). |
Kim et al., 2008 [32] | N = 1130 | Randomized control study | Interpersonal/Social | DAD was prevalent among college students in Hispanic-serving universities. Students living off-campus were more likely to participate in DAD (p-value < 0.01). |
Kohn et al., 2014 [33] | N = 444 | Longitudinal study | Interpersonal/Social | Self-reported drunk driving was more likely among males compared to females (p < 0.01). |
LaBrie et al., 2011 [34] | N = 6000 | Randomized control study | Intrapersonal/Psychological Interpersonal/Social | 19.1% reported driving after consuming 3 or more drinks in the past 3 months. Fraternity or sorority and family history of alcohol abuse predicted DAD. |
LaBrie et al., 2010 [35] | N = 3753 | Randomized control study | Intrapersonal/Psychological Interpersonal/Social | 35.0% of the participants had a history of alcohol abuse and were more likely to have drunk alcohol in the previous year (p < 0.001). |
Martin et al., 2018 [36] | N = 1298 | Cross-sectional study | Interpersonal/Social | 98% of the students did not drink and drive, while 80.4% did not fall asleep; 81.7% read a text while driving and 75.3% sent a text while driving. Hazardous drinking was associated with drinking and driving and sending a text while driving (p < 0.001) and falling asleep (p < 0.001). |
Quinn & Fromme, 2012 [37] | N = 1833 | Randomized control study | Intrapersonal/Psychological | Participants were more likely to drive after drinking when they were objectively more intoxicated but perceived themselves to be less intoxicated. Prevalence of driving after drinking also increased in the 4th year of college from 26.6% in the first year to 32.7% in the 4th year. |
Quinn & Fromme, 2012 [38] | N = 1350 | Randomized control study | Intrapersonal/Psychological | Students, especially males, who began drinking early in life participated in DAD more. DAD was significant (p < 0.05). |
Rothman et al., 2008 [39] | N = 1792 | Cross-sectional study | Intrapersonal/Psychological | 14% of the participants reported taking their first drink at age 14; 36% of the participants were drinkers with unhealthy alcohol use. |
Teeters et al., 2014 [40] | N = 207 | Randomized control study | Intrapersonal/Psychological | 45% of the participants reported DAD in the past 6 months. Participants also reported consuming 16.07 drinks per week (SD = 13.48). |
Teeters & Murphy, 2015 [41] | N = 419 | Randomized control study | Intrapersonal/Psychological | 56.5% participants reported DAD after 1–2 drinks, 29.1% reported DAD after 2–4 drinks and 13.1% reported DAD after 5 or more drinks. |
Whitehill et al., 2014 [42] | N = 315 | Cross-sectional study | Policy Environmental | 52.6% (p < 0.001) of students drove after using marijuana. 86% (p = 0.21) of the participants rode as passengers with a marijuana-using driver. 65.1% of the participants drank alcohol, 14.7% of the participants participated in DAD (p = 0.01), and 32.2% (p = 0.07%) reported riding with an alcohol-using driver. |
Woolsey et al., 2015 [43] | N = 2015 | Cross-sectional study | Intrapersonal/Psychological | Combined users of energy drinks and alcohol were more likely to (1) drive when they perceived they were over a Breath Alcohol Concentration (BAC) of 0.08% (p < 0.001), (2) drive despite knowing they had too much to drink to drive safely (p < 0.001), (3) be a passenger when they knew the driver had too much alcohol to drive safely (p < 0.001). |
Zakletskaia, 2009 [44] | N = 1587 | Cross-sectional study | Intrapersonal/Psychological | Sensation seeking remains a statistically significant independent predictor of alcohol-impaired driving behavior (OR = 1.52; CI = 1.19–1.94; p < 0.001). Older, Caucasians, sensation-seeking college students who engage in heavy episodic drinking, live off-campus, and go to bars are at highest risk for alcohol-impaired driving behaviors. |
Zhang & Sloan, 2014 [45] | N = 1634 | Cross-sectional study | Intrapersonal/Psychological Environmental | Depression increased the number of DAD events during the past year by 0.572. This decreased to 0.411 episodes/year after adding SES. |
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Bonsu, L.; Grigsby, T.J.; Johansen, C.; Awan, A.; Kapukotuwa, S.; Sharma, M. A Scoping Review of Determinants of Drinking and Driving Behavior among Young Adult College Students in the US. Psychoactives 2024, 3, 248-264. https://doi.org/10.3390/psychoactives3020016
Bonsu L, Grigsby TJ, Johansen C, Awan A, Kapukotuwa S, Sharma M. A Scoping Review of Determinants of Drinking and Driving Behavior among Young Adult College Students in the US. Psychoactives. 2024; 3(2):248-264. https://doi.org/10.3390/psychoactives3020016
Chicago/Turabian StyleBonsu, Laurencia, Timothy J. Grigsby, Christopher Johansen, Asma Awan, Sidath Kapukotuwa, and Manoj Sharma. 2024. "A Scoping Review of Determinants of Drinking and Driving Behavior among Young Adult College Students in the US" Psychoactives 3, no. 2: 248-264. https://doi.org/10.3390/psychoactives3020016
APA StyleBonsu, L., Grigsby, T. J., Johansen, C., Awan, A., Kapukotuwa, S., & Sharma, M. (2024). A Scoping Review of Determinants of Drinking and Driving Behavior among Young Adult College Students in the US. Psychoactives, 3(2), 248-264. https://doi.org/10.3390/psychoactives3020016