A network analysis of alcohol-related harms: an exploratory study in United Kingdom adolescents

Andrew Percy, Colm Healy, Jon C. Cole, Gareth Robinson, Harry R. Sumnall, Michael T. McKay*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background
This study applied a network analysis approach to the study of individual self-reported alcohol-related harms (ARHs) across four waves of data.

Methods
Data were from a large clustered randomised control trial (N = 12,738) involving 105 schools. Data were collected at 4 time points over 4 academic years (mean age 12.5 [Time 0], 13.5 [T1], 14.5 [T2], and 15.3 years [Time 3]). Data were gathered on the experience of 16 separate ARHs experienced during the previous six months, and these were dichotomised (yes/no). We estimated cross-lagged panel networks for the 16 ARHs, capturing both the auto-regressive relationships (a harm predicting itself at follow up) and the cross-lagged relationships (a harm predicting another harm at follow-up) across the study (T0 → T1; T1 → T2; T2 →T3).

Results
Exposure to all ARHs increased with age. However, the most serious ARHs (e.g., getting in trouble with the police because of your drinking) remained relatively rare, even at age 15. Actively planning to get drunk, coupled with an inability to control levels of intoxication (drinking more than planned) appeared central to each network, facilitating the emergence of all other ARHs. While the prevalence of ARHs increased with age, network complexity declined, and networks becoming more stable.

Conclusions
Interventions aimed at improving the capacity to self-regulate alcohol consumption, and actively challenging the planning of drunken episodes, may be pivotal in reducing the emergence of both acute and chronic ARHs in adolescence.

Original languageEnglish
Article number112658
Number of pages9
JournalDrug and Alcohol Dependence
Volume271
Early online date26 Mar 2025
DOIs
Publication statusEarly online date - 26 Mar 2025

Keywords

  • network analysis
  • adolescents
  • alcohol-related harms

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