Project Details
Description
The literature shows that a significant number of young adults report trauma exposure and associated
traumatic stress sequelae by the time they enter into college. Other students will be exposed to trauma and
experience resulting sequelae during their college experience. Epidemiological and clinical literature has
linked the etiology and course of trauma, traumatic stress sequelae (TSS), and substance use (SUB). This
link may be understood from a Social Learning (SLT) framework which views substance use as an effort to
cope with psychological distress associated with ongoing traumatic sequelae. Further, SLT posits that these
phenomena are reciprocally related, and are affected by individual and environmental factors. Despite high
rates of trauma, TSS,and SUB in college populations, theoretically guided, prospective examination of these
associations and factors affecting their course in college students have been curiously absent in the
empirical literature.
This research seeks to provide a theoretically guided investigation of the dynamic course of traumatic
stress sequelae and alcohol, illicit drugs, and tobacco use in college students. On-line survey data will be
collected in 6 waves in the first year and 4 waves each year for the subsequent years. Data will be collected
at two public universities. Students at SUNY Buffalo and UNC Greensboro will be contacted by e-mail in the
summer prior to matriculation and will be screened via web-based survey for trauma exposure and traumatic
stress sequelae. Based on this screening, a sample of 1,004 (TSS and non-TSS) students will be targeted
for follow-up. Using web technology, students will be surveyed first in the Fall semester of each year in
college, and will be assessed multiple times each year of the study. Prospective associations among trauma,
TSS, and substance use trajectories will be examined using latent growth curve modeling. Mediators (self-
efficacy) and moderators (gender, coping, social influences) will be tested consistent with Social Learning
Theory, and other relevant theoretical frameworks. The impact of trauma and TSS on university drop-out
rates also will be examined. This research will help to shape understanding of the TSS-SUB association, and
to inform the development of targeted substance use interventions for college students. Findings also will
offer valuable information for university administrators regarding student attrition and retention.
| Status | Finished |
|---|---|
| Effective start/end date | 05/1/06 → 01/31/13 |
Funding
- National Institute on Drug Abuse: $1,635,600.00
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