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    Daily physical activity and alcohol use across the adult lifespan

    Access Status
    Fulltext not available
    Authors
    Conroy, D.
    Ram, N.
    Pincus, A.
    Coffman, D.
    Lorek, A.
    Rebar, Amanda
    Roche, M.
    Date
    2015
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Conroy, D. and Ram, N. and Pincus, A. and Coffman, D. and Lorek, A. and Rebar, A. and Roche, M. 2015. Daily physical activity and alcohol use across the adult lifespan. Health Psychology. 34 (6): pp. 653-660.
    Source Title
    Health Psychology
    DOI
    10.1037/hea0000157
    ISSN
    0278-6133
    School
    School of Psychology
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/71748
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    © 2014 American Psychological Association. Objective: In contrast to proposals that physical activity (PA) can be a substitute for alcohol use, people who engage in greater overall PA generally consume more alcohol on average than less-active peers. Acknowledging that both PA and alcohol use vary considerably from day-to-day, this study evaluated whether established associations reflect daily behavioral coupling within-person, are an artifact of procedures that aggregate behavior over time, or both. Methods: A life span sample of 150 adults (aged 19-89 years) completed three 21-day measurement bursts of a daily diary study. At the end of each day, they reported on their PA and alcohol consumption. Data were analyzed in a negative binomial multilevel regression. Results: As expected, both behaviors exhibited limited between-person variation. After controlling for age, gender, and seasonal and social calendar influences, daily deviations in PA were significantly associated with daily total alcohol use. Once the within-person process linking PA and alcohol use was controlled, usual PA and total alcohol use were not associated. Conclusions: The established between-person association linking PA and alcohol use reflects the aggregation of a daily process that unfolds within-people over time. Further work is needed to identify mediators of this daily association and to evaluate causality, as well as to investigate these relations in high-risk samples.

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