Alcohol and Implicit Process in Sexual Risk Behavior in MSM
Status: | Recruiting |
---|---|
Conditions: | Psychiatric |
Therapuetic Areas: | Psychiatry / Psychology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 21 - 50 |
Updated: | 7/19/2018 |
Start Date: | May 2016 |
End Date: | April 2020 |
Contact: | Steve A Maisto, PhD |
Email: | samaisto@syr.edu |
Phone: | (315) 425-6546 |
The current study is the first empirical investigation that directly addresses the
correspondence between responses regarding indicators of risky sexual behavior while under
the influence of alcohol in the laboratory and the occurrence of sexually risky behavior
while under the influence of alcohol in the natural environment, by use of Ecological
Sampling Methodology (ESM). The study will allow us to compare and contrast implicit and
explicit assessments of sexual risk in respect to future behavior in the natural environment.
The data obtained will thus provide new information regarding the external validity of
alcohol administration studies of sexual risk behavior and will provide information to
optimize the selection of dependent measures. The current study also represents the first
attempt to test a causal model linking alcohol intoxication and risky sexual behavior as a
function of both automatic, reflexive, approach tendencies and effortful, deliberative,
self-control (operationalized by executive working memory in this application). The ESM study
will augment the findings of the experiment by providing a detailed assessment of contextual
factors that affect sexual risk behavior as well as replicating and extending the findings of
the experiment to sexual risk situations in the natural environment. Finally, to our
knowledge there has been only one experimental study of alcohol and sexual risk in MSM
(Maisto, Palfai, Vanable, Heath, & Woolf-King, 2012), which is remarkable given that MSM have
been identified as the population at highest risk to contract the HIV in the U.S. since the
virus was identified in the early 1980s. Thus the proposed research is only the second
attempt to add to an understanding of the connections among alcohol, cognitive processes, and
sexual risk behaviors in MSM.
correspondence between responses regarding indicators of risky sexual behavior while under
the influence of alcohol in the laboratory and the occurrence of sexually risky behavior
while under the influence of alcohol in the natural environment, by use of Ecological
Sampling Methodology (ESM). The study will allow us to compare and contrast implicit and
explicit assessments of sexual risk in respect to future behavior in the natural environment.
The data obtained will thus provide new information regarding the external validity of
alcohol administration studies of sexual risk behavior and will provide information to
optimize the selection of dependent measures. The current study also represents the first
attempt to test a causal model linking alcohol intoxication and risky sexual behavior as a
function of both automatic, reflexive, approach tendencies and effortful, deliberative,
self-control (operationalized by executive working memory in this application). The ESM study
will augment the findings of the experiment by providing a detailed assessment of contextual
factors that affect sexual risk behavior as well as replicating and extending the findings of
the experiment to sexual risk situations in the natural environment. Finally, to our
knowledge there has been only one experimental study of alcohol and sexual risk in MSM
(Maisto, Palfai, Vanable, Heath, & Woolf-King, 2012), which is remarkable given that MSM have
been identified as the population at highest risk to contract the HIV in the U.S. since the
virus was identified in the early 1980s. Thus the proposed research is only the second
attempt to add to an understanding of the connections among alcohol, cognitive processes, and
sexual risk behaviors in MSM.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Participants must be between the ages of 21-50
- Moderate or heavy drinkers based on classifications from the
Quantity-Frequency-Variability Questionnaire (QFV; Cahalan, Cisin, & Crossley, 1969)
- Self-identify with the sexual orientation equivalent of a 3 or higher on the Kinsey
Scale (Kinsey et al., 1948; Kinsey et al., 1953), a 7-point scale used to assess
self-identified sexual orientation, with zero representing exclusive heterosexuality
and 6 representing exclusive homosexuality.
- Participants must also have engaged in sex with other men at least once/month for the
past 3 months.
Exclusion Criteria:
- a) under the age of 21 or b) do not have a government issued ID or c) are not able to
provide medical records or other official documents with a birthdate (e.g., birth
certificate), accompanied by a photo ID
- Scores ≥ 5 on the Brief Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test (Brief MAST; Pokorny,
Miller, & Kaplan, 1972)
- Any ASSIST substance involvement score of ≥ 27 (National Institute on Drug Abuse;
http://www.drugabuse.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/nmassist.pdf)
- Score ≥ 15 on the Patient Health Questionnaire-8 (PHQ-8; Kroenke et al., 2009)
- 4 subscales of the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI; Derogatis & Melisaratos, 1979),
Somatization, Obsession-compulsion, Paranoid ideation, and Psychoticism will be
administered; Individuals experiencing severe psychological health symptoms (score > 2
on any item) will be further questioned by a research assistant in order to determine
if there is psychiatric distress or problems present
- Report current medications or current medical problems (e.g., liver disorders, heart
disease, HIV+ serostatus) that contraindicate alcohol use using the Medical Condition
Questionnaire; Participants who confirm that they are using (i.e., have used in the
past week) any prescribed drugs for which alcohol use is contraindicated
(http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/druginfo/drug_Aa.html) will be excluded.
Participants also currently regularly taking (i.e., past 24 hours) any herbals and
vitamins, including sleep aids (chamomile) and herbal preparations for anxiety and
depression (Kava Kava or St. John's Wort) that contraindicate alcohol use will be
excluded
- Persons with cognitive and or psychomotor deficits will be excluded from the
experiment (based on RA and PI determination)
- Endorse currently being in a committed, exclusive monogamous relationship
- Report treatment for emotional or substance use disorders (defined by current
treatment or treatment in the past 3 months) or recent history of significant alcohol
problems as indicated by inpatient/outpatient alcohol treatment or alcohol self-help
group attendance (e.g., AA) within the past 3 years.
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