Reward, relief, and habit drinking profiles in treatment seeking individuals with an AUD.

Alcohol Alcohol

Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90095, United States.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to compare individuals with Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) based on their drinking motivations: reward, relief, and habit, and evaluate how these profiles affect drinking behaviors and mood.
  • A group of 169 treatment-seeking individuals with AUD participated in the study, using a specific scale to categorize their drinking motives, and were included in a follow-up medication trial where they provided longitudinal data.
  • Results indicated that those who drink primarily for relief experienced higher cravings and negative moods, and were more likely to have worse drinking outcomes and increased anxiety over a 12-week period compared to those motivated by reward.

Article Abstract

Aims: This study aimed to compare reward, relief, and habit treatment-seeking individuals on recent drinking, alcohol use disorder (AUD) phenomenology, and mood. The second aim of the study was to evaluate the predictive validity of reward, relief, and habit profiles.

Method: Treatment-seeking individuals with an AUD (n = 169) were recruited to participate in a medication trial for AUD (NCT03594435). Reward, relief, and habit drinking groups were assessed using the UCLA Reward Relief Habit Drinking Scale. Group differences at baseline were evaluated using univariate analyses of variance. A subset of participants were enrolled in a 12-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled medication trial (n = 102), and provided longitudinal drinking and phenomenology data. The predictive validity of group membership was assessed using linear regression analyses.

Results: At baseline, individuals who drink primarily for relief had higher craving and negative mood than those who drink for reward and habit. Prospectively, membership in the relief drinking group predicted greater alcohol use, greater heavy drinking, and fewer days abstinent compared to those in the reward drinking group. Membership in the relief drinking group also predicted greater alcohol craving, more alcohol-related consequences, and more anxiety symptoms over 12 weeks compared to those in the reward drinking group.

Conclusions: This study provides support for reward and relief drinking motive profiles in treatment-seeking individuals with an AUD. Membership in the relief drinking motive group was predictive of poorer drinking outcomes and more negative symptomology over 12 weeks, indicating that individuals who drink for relief may be a particularly vulnerable sub-population of individuals with AUD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11082523PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alcalc/agae032DOI Listing

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