Jade van de Luitgaarden’s research while affiliated with Maastricht University and other places

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Publications (6)


Adolescents Binge Drinking When on Holiday: An Evaluation of a Community Intervention Based on Self-Regulation
  • Article

January 2010

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12 Reads

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7 Citations

Jade van de Luitgaarden

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This paper presents a case study of a community intervention aimed at reducing excessive drinking in young men on holiday in seaside camping resorts in the Netherlands. The self-regulated voluntary covenant of parties concerned was evaluated on the basis of several types of data (all collected in 2004 ): questionnaires administered to young men (N = 191), observations carried out by trained "peers," nuisance questionnaires among city center residents (N = 121), and interviews with local actors. Compliance with measures as well as the effects of measures are discussed. Limitations are noted and recommendations for optimizing the potential of community interventions are made.


Prevention of Alcohol Problems in Dutch Youth

July 2008

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45 Reads

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10 Citations

Evaluation & the Health Professions

Binge drinking among young people is a problem in the Netherlands. This article outlines the current Dutch approach to alcohol prevention in this target group. It is argued that well-enforced evidence-based control measures are lacking despite renewed political interest in them. Politicians often favor alcohol education, but to increase the effectiveness of alcohol prevention, a combined approach of policy measures, enforcement, and education is needed. Translation of education and policy-based measures is discussed.


Single-session expectancy challenge with young heavy drinkers on holiday

January 2008

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13 Reads

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16 Citations

Addictive Behaviors

Expectancy challenges (ECs) were used to change alcohol expectancies and alcohol consumption in young heavy drinking men (age 16-24) on holiday. The intervention took place in community centers and bars. Alcohol expectancies and consumption were assessed with paper and pencil measures prior to the intervention (N=301) and 2 days afterwards (EC: n=178; controls: n=86). Six weeks after the EC, participants were interviewed by telephone (EC: n=163; controls: n=71). The intervention resulted in an increase in sedation expectancies in the EC group. Furthermore, the EC led to a differential reduction in alcohol consumption on a night out at the six-week posttest in the heaviest drinkers only. The reduction in alcohol consumption on a night out was not mediated by the change in sedation expectancies. These findings suggest that further research on the mechanisms of change is necessary before a single-session EC may be used in a real-life prevention setting.


Figure 1. Change in VAS arousal expectancies in men, by condition. Assessments were done a day before the intervention (T1), 24 hours after the intervention (T2), and 6 weeks after the intervention (T3). 
Table 1 Number of participants per questionnaire, time, condition, and gender
Figure 2. Change in VAS sedation expectancies, by condition. Assessments were done a day before the intervention (T1), 24 hours after the intervention (T2), and 6 weeks after the intervention (T3). 
Table 4 Means (M) and standard deviations (SD) for demographic and background variables
From the Laboratory to Real Life: A Pilot Study of an Expectancy Challenge With “Heavy Drinking” Young People on Holiday
  • Article
  • Full-text available

February 2006

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100 Reads

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15 Citations

The Alcohol Expectancy Challenge (EC) is a promising program for changing alcohol expectancies and reducing alcohol consumption in "heavy drinking" young men in a bar-lab setting. In this study the EC was adapted for use in mixed-gender groups in a holiday setting and its feasibility tested in camping resorts in the Netherlands where a lot of binge drinking takes place (summer 2002). Male and female participants (N = 170; mean age, 18.8 years) were randomly assigned to an EC or to an assessment-only control group. One day before the intervention, alcohol expectancies were measured by a Visual Analogue Scale of arousal-sedation expectancies (VAS expectancies questionnaire). At the same time, alcohol use in everyday life and on holiday was assessed by a General Drinking Questionnaire and a 24-hour drinking diary, respectively. Twenty-four hours after the intervention, the VAS expectancies questionnaire was administered again and alcohol use over the previous 24 hours was reported in the drinking diary. Six weeks after the intervention, participants were telephoned and administered oral versions of the VAS expectancies questionnaire and General Drinking Questionnaire. Data were analyzed using mixed ANOVAs. Although the study was hampered by recruitment difficulties, the EC proved feasible in this setting, was well received by youngsters, and effects on their alcohol expectancies may have been present. No effect was found on alcohol use. In conclusion, implementation must be improved and more studies are needed to come to more definite conclusions about the value of the EC in a real-life targeted intervention.

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Challenging Implicit and Explicit Alcohol-Related Cognitions in Young Heavy Drinkers

July 2005

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152 Reads

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195 Citations

Addiction

To test whether an expectancy challenge (EC) changes implicit and explicit alcohol-related cognitions and binge drinking in young heavy drinkers. This is important for theoretical and practical reasons: the EC presents a critical test for the hypothesized mediational role of alcohol cognitions and the EC has been presented as a promising intervention to counter alcohol problems in heavy drinking youth. SETTING, PARTICIPANTS AND INTERVENTION: Ninety-two heavy drinking college and university students (half women) were assigned randomly to the EC or control condition (a sham alcohol experiment in the same bar-laboratory). Explicit alcohol cognitions and alcohol use were assessed with paper-and-pencil measures. Alcohol use was assessed prior to the experiment and during a 1-month follow-up. Implicit alcohol-related cognitions were assessed with two versions of the Implicit Association Test (IAT), adapted to assess implicit valence and arousal associations with alcohol. The EC resulted in decreased explicit positive arousal expectancies in men and women alike. There was some evidence for a differential reduction in implicit arousal associations, but findings depended on the version of the IAT and on the scoring-algorithm used. In men (but not in women) there was a short-lived differential reduction in prospective alcohol use (significant in week 3 of the follow-up), and this reduction was partially mediated by the decrease in explicit positive arousal expectancies. These findings suggest that an EC successfully changes explicit alcohol cognitions and that this may have short-lived beneficial effects in heavy drinking young men.


Citations (5)


... Hence, alcohol-related health education is necessary for minors. Community-based interventions can effectively reduce high-risk alcohol consumption and effects of alcohol [35,36], especially for the youth. Liqueur consumption trends show the opposite from that of beer consumption, as more Chinese men are more inclined to consume beer as they age. ...

Reference:

Trends in Alcohol Intake and the Association between Socio-Demographic Factors and Volume of Alcohol Intake amongst Adult Male Drinkers in China
Adolescents Binge Drinking When on Holiday: An Evaluation of a Community Intervention Based on Self-Regulation
  • Citing Article
  • January 2010

... This research field has long been focused on severe alcohol use disorder. However, the release of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) and the switch from categorical to dimensional approaches led researchers to intensify the exploration of populations presenting an excessive but not clinically diagnosed alcohol consumption, such as high-risk drinkers (Field, Mogg, Zetteler, & Bradley, 2004;Wiers, van de Luitgaarden, van den Wildenberg, & Smulders, 2005). These individuals constitute a population of particular interest as, while not being involved in any treatment and thus not being identified as fulfilling DSM-5 criteria for severe alcohol use disorder, their excessive consumption puts them at risk for developing alcohol use disorder. ...

Challenging Implicit and Explicit Alcohol-Related Cognitions in Young Heavy Drinkers
  • Citing Article
  • July 2005

Addiction

... Les thérapies traditionnelles menées dans le cadre de la dépendance à l'alcool se centrent sur le changement des attitudes conscientes de l'individu envers l'alcool, ses croyances et ses envies. En dépit d'une certaine efficacité, ces thérapies ont cependant un succès limité Van de Luitgaarden, Wiers, Knibbe, & Boone, 2006) et le taux de rechute dans la dépendance à l'alcool reste très élevé (Brownell et al., 1986 ;Maffi, 1997). Ces résultats limités peuvent être expliqués par le fait que ces thérapies visent uniquement au changement des attitudes explicites, laissant les attitudes implicites intactes. ...

From the Laboratory to Real Life: A Pilot Study of an Expectancy Challenge With “Heavy Drinking” Young People on Holiday

... Both the Australian and English women experienced drinking wine as a liminal experience; however, this was more pronounced among the English women, where the idea of consuming holiday drinks as part of overseas holidays is culturally embedded (Andrews, 2011). The idea of holidays as a time to relax normal rules of conduct frames many accounts of alcohol consumption on holiday (Andrews, 2011;Bell, 2008;Bellis et al., 2015;Hesse & Tutenges, 2010;Van de Luitgaarden et al., 2007). Just as consuming meals first encountered overseas enables reconnection to holiday memories (Sutton, 2001), by thinking about drinking wine from overseas, these recollections serve to extend a pleasant holiday, and thus an enjoyable liminal experience which connects especially well with the 'letting go' that is associated with drinking. ...

Single-session expectancy challenge with young heavy drinkers on holiday
  • Citing Article
  • January 2008

Addictive Behaviors

... For example, in Mexico, if second-hand smoking is viewed as hazardous, it may be just as likely that a populace will think that the non-smoker should move away from the smoke as it is that the smoker should move away from the nonsmoker, both trying to avoid public disagreement (Thrasher et al., 2008). Likewise, tolerance, self-control, and self-determination are often emphasized in the Netherlands ( Van de Luitgaarden, Thush, Wiers, & Knibbe, 2008), which may be a barrier in reducing negative alcohol consequences widespread in this country. Leisure activity in Spain has always been linked to social relations within a community involving the consumption of wine, including attendance at clubs, which are open all night (Espada, Lloret, & del Castillo, 2008). ...

Prevention of Alcohol Problems in Dutch Youth
  • Citing Article
  • July 2008

Evaluation & the Health Professions