Is talk cheap? Correspondence between self-attributions about changes in drinking and longitudinal changes in drinking during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic.
Meenu MinhasKyla BelisarioAlba Gonzalez-RozJillian HalladayVanessa L MorrisMatthew KeoughJames G MurphyJames M MacKillopPublished in: Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research (2021)
Self-attributions about drinking closely corresponded to longitudinal changes in drinking, supporting the validity of self-attributions in population-level surveys, particularly in young adults. Notably, a subgroup was identified that exhibited pronounced increases for all alcohol-related outcomes and concurrent increases in internalizing psychopathology.