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The role of combat exposure on drinking behavior and subjective well-being: A Rubin Causal Model approach. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how combat exposure affects behavioral outcomes, specifically focusing on alcohol-related behaviors and subjective well-being, using a large data set from UK BioBank.
  • Researchers created hypothetical experiments to compare individuals with combat exposure versus those without, adjusting for relevant factors.
  • Findings indicate that combat exposure is linked to negative effects, such as increased daily alcohol consumption and decreased general happiness, contributing to a better understanding of these issues in psychological science.

Article Abstract

Objective: Investigating the role of combat exposure on behavioral outcomes has been limited due to ethical and logistical constraints.

Method: Using a large data set from UK BioBank of U.K. citizens ( = 157,161), we created hypothetical randomized experiments, with treatment conditions for combat exposure or no combat exposure matched for relevant covariates and compared differences in combat exposure groups on a broad range of alcohol-related and subjective well-being outcomes. Additionally, using a randomization-based approach, we calculated 95% Fisherian intervals for constant treatment effects consistent with the matched data and the hypothetical combat exposure intervention.

Results: Results suggest that combat exposure plays a role in several negative outcomes related to alcohol behavior and subjective well-being, such as increased typical daily alcohol consumption (estimated average causal effect [ACE] = 0.0545, Fisher -value = .0119) and less general health happiness (estimated ACE = -0.1077, Fisher -value < 1/100,000).

Conclusions: This study expands our current understanding of the role of combat exposure on many alcohol and subjective well-being-related measures. We also show that the Rubin Causal Model provides a rigorous and valid approach to better understand myriad other issues in psychological science. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/tra0001546DOI Listing

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