Shame’s Associations with Depression and Problem Drinking: An Ecological Momentary Study

Date

2021-07-12

Authors

Bilevicius, Elena
Kempe, Tyler
Pankratz, Lily
Wardell, Jeffrey D.
Johnson, Edward A.
Keough, Matthew T.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Abstract

Introduction: Depression and problem drinking are comorbid in emerging adulthood, yet the processes that link them are not well understood. Research has argued that shame has a unique influence on the experience of problematic drinking, but this has rarely been assessed at the state level. Using ecological momentary assessments (EMAs), we assessed whether shame, and not guilt, mediated the association between baseline depression and alcohol use and problems. Methods: One hundred and eighty-four emerging adults (Mage = 19.27) completed a 12-day EMA study. Multilevel models were used to test hypotheses. Results: In a model with alcohol use as the outcome, there were no significant associations between shame or guilt and alcohol use at the within- or between-subjects level. In a model with alcohol problems as the outcome, guilt was positively associated with alcohol problems but only at the daily level. At the between-subjects level and after controlling for guilt, there was a significant association between depression, shame, and alcohol problems; average levels of shame mediated the association between depression and alcohol problems. In post-hoc reverse directionality models, average alcohol problems mediated the relationship between depression and shame and guilt at the between-person level. No mediation was present for alcohol use. Conclusion: After controlling for guilt, shame is an emotion that helps explain risk for alcohol problems among depressed emerging adults, which has implications for targeted interventions. Reciprocal associations between shame, guilt, and alcohol problems emerged highlighting the need for more fulsome assessments of shame and guilt in future EMA research.

Description

Keywords

depression, shame, guilt, problem drinking, alcohol problems, EMA

Citation

Bilevicius, E., Kempe, T., Pankratz, L., Wardell, J.D., Johnson, E.A. & Keough, M.T. (2021). Shame’s associations with depression and problem drinking: An ecological momentary study. Substance Use & Misuse, 56, 1715-1725.