Abstract
White, non-Hispanic college students tend to drink more alcohol and experience more negative consequences than African American college students. However, racial differences have not been examined for protective behavioral strategies. This study examined whether race and gender moderated the associations that protective behavioral strategies had with alcohol consumption and negative alcohol-related consequences. In general, the use of protective behavioral strategies were associated with greater deceases in consumption, harmful drinking, and negative consequences for White, non-Hispanic students than African American students, which suggests important racial differences related to protective strategy use. Research and clinical implications are provided.
Notes
Note. Correlations for African American (AA) participants (n = 141) are presented above the diagonal and correlations for the White, non-Hispanic (WNH) participants (n = 294) are presented below the diagonal.
*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001.
*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001.