Background
This study is the first to examine the developmental course of high‐intensity drinking (i.e., consuming 10+ drinks in a row) across late adolescence and the transition to adulthood.
Methods
National longitudinal data (N = 3,718) from Monitoring the Future were used to examine trajectories of 10+ high‐intensity drinking from age 18 through 25/26 overall and across sociodemographic subgroups; results were compared with similar analysis of 5+ binge drinking trajectories.
Results
Results document that 10+ drinkers consume not just a greater quantity of alcohol on a given drinking occasion, but also engage in 5+ drinking more frequently than drinkers who do not report having 10 or more drinks. Developmental patterns for 10+ and 5+ drinking were similar, with peak frequencies reported at age 21/22. Greater peaks in both 10+ and 5+ drinking were documented among men and among college attenders, compared with women and nonattenders, respectively. However, there was a steeper decline in 10+ drinking after age 21/22, indicating that risk for consumption of 10 or more drinks in a row is more clearly focused on the early 20s. Patterns of developmental change in both behaviors were driven largely by college students: No significant age‐related change in 10+ drinking was observed among men and women who did not go to college, and no significant age‐related change in 5+ drinking was observed among female nonattenders.
Conclusions
Findings underscore the importance of recognizing high‐intensity drinkers as a unique high‐risk group, and that college attendance is associated with particularly strong peaks in the developmental course of high‐intensity drinking.