Published September 15, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Distress-driven impulsivity interacts with trait compulsivity in association with problematic drinking: A two-sample study

  • 1. Monash University
  • 2. University of Southampton
  • 3. University of Chicago

Description

Objective: Problematic drinking is highly prevalent among the general population, oftentimes leading to significant negative consequences, including physical injury, psychological problems and financial hardship. In order to design targeted early interventions for problematic drinking, it is important to understand the mechanisms that render individuals at risk for and/or maintain this behavior. Two candidate drivers of problematic drinking are distress-driven impulsivity and trait compulsivity, with recent research suggesting these constructs may interact to enhance risk for addictive behaviors. The current study examined whether individual differences in distress-driven impulsivity and trait compulsivity interact in relation to problematic drinking.

Method: Distress-driven impulsivity (indexed by the S-UPPS-P negative urgency subscale), trait compulsivity (indexed by the CHIT scale) and problematic drinking (indexed by the BATCAP alcohol scale) were assessed in two independent online samples (Sample 1, n = 117; Sample 2, n = 474). Bootstrapped moderation analysis was conducted to examine whether trait compulsivity moderated the relationship between distress-driven impulsivity and problematic drinking.

Results: In both samples, there was a significant interaction between distress-driven impulsivity and trait compulsivity in relation to problematic drinking. Follow-up tests revealed that, in both samples, higher distress-driven impulsivity was associated with more problematic drinking behaviors among participants with high trait compulsivity only.

Conclusions: The current findings add to the growing literature supporting an interactive relationship between impulsivity and compulsivity-related traits in relation to addictive behaviors and have implications for informing early detection of risk and targeted early interventions.

Files

Distress-driven-impulsivity-interacts-with-trait-compulsivity-in-association-with-problematic-drinking.pdf

Files (325.5 kB)

Name Size Download all
Article
md5:b83630cb4ba09346abc0c833aac69f8c
307.1 kB Preview Download
md5:ef3dce58699783eed5b2ea751fde8f70
18.4 kB Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.3389/fpsyt.2022.938275
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5023

Funding

Monash University
National Health and Medical Research Council
APP1117188
Australian Research Council
Australian Defense Science and Technology
Department of Industry, Innovation and Science
Monash University
David Winston Turner Endowment Fund
Wellcome Trust Clinical Fellowship
110049/Z/15/Z
Wellcome Trust Clinical Fellowship
110049/Z/15/A
National Health and Medical Research Council
APP1162031

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience