Short Communication
Multiple addictive behaviors in young adults: Student norms for the Shorter
PROMIS Questionnaire
Vance V. MacLaren, Lisa A. Best ⁎
University of New Brunswick, Canada
abstract article info
Keywords:
Addictive behaviors
Polysubstance
Norms
Students
The Shorter PROMIS Questionnaire (SPQ; Christo, Jones, Haylett, Stephenson, Lefever & Lefever, 2003) is a
multidimensional self report that measures 16 addictive behaviors. This study examined the psychometric
properties of the SPQ and collected normative data from 948 students at two Canadian universities. Factor
analysis confirmed the existence of two categories of addictive behavior, which Haylett and her colleagues
(2004) labelled hedonistic and nurturant. The hedonistic categories included behaviors such as the use of
prescription drugs, gambling, caffeine, illegal drugs, alcohol, tobacco and compulsive sex. The nurturant group
included behaviors such as compulsive helping, work, relationships, shopping, disordered eating and exercise.
Men (N = 250) scored higher than women on dominant relationships, exercise, gambling, illegal drugs,
alcohol, tobacco and sex. Women (N = 698) scored higher on compulsive shopping, food binging and starving.
These results suggest that the SPQ may be a useful index of multiple addictive behaviors in college-age people.
© 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
1. Introduction
Comorbidity of addictive behaviors is an important consideration for
researchers and clinicians but there are practical and ethical restraints
on the amount and type of information that can be collected from
research participants. Structured interviews are inefficient in many
research settings (e.g. Topp, Hando, Dillon, Roche, & Solowij, 1999) and,
although brief self reports can be used to measure the use of alcohol (e.g.
Stockwell, Murphy, & Hodgson, 1983), illicit drugs (e.g. Gossop et al.,
1995), gambling (e.g. Lesieur & Blume, 1988), and disordered eating
(e.g. Garner, Olmstead, & Polivy, 1983), the co-administration of many
scales can be cumbersome. Some researchers have used simple de novo
questionnaires intended to assess multiple addictions, but these
instruments are likely to omit important details and their psychometric
reliability and validity are not established (e.g. Cook, 1989; Greenberg,
Lewis, & Dodd, 1999). Research focusing on multiple addictive behaviors
might be facilitated by the availability of a multidimensional self report
questionnaire. In this study, we assessed the psychometric properties of
the Shorter PROMIS Questionnaire (SPQ; Christo et al., 2003) as a tool for
correlational research in university settings.
The SPQ was originally developed after an archival study of the
co-occurrence of addictive behaviors among patients at a substance
dependence recovery facility (Stephenson, Maggi, Lefever & Morojele,
1995). The psychometric properties of the SPQ and its 16 subscales were
tested and norms for adults were established (Christo et al., 2003).
Because the SPQ simultaneously measures a wide array of behaviors, it
appears to be an ideal tool to test the notion that some of the addictive
behaviors might have common etiology. Using factor analysis, Haylett,
Stephenson, and Lefever (2004) identified two broad categories of
addictive behaviors that are measured by the SPQ, which they termed
hedonistic and nurturant. The hedonistic behaviors included the use of
alcohol, tobacco, illegal and prescription drugs; gambling, compulsive
sex, and dominance or submission in intimate relationships. The
nurturant cluster included compulsive working and shopping, disor-
dered eating and exercise, and compulsively helping others in a
dominant or submissive role. The SPQ seems ideally suited to studies
of the comorbidity of substance use and other compulsive behaviors.
A full understanding of addictive behavior is hindered by the fact
that many social scientists have limited access to clinical populations
and many conduct research using university students as research
subjects. Although, according to the most recent American estimate,
people between the ages of 18 and 25 have the highest incidence of
drug use (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administra-
tion, 2008), students have lower rates of drug abuse than non-
students. In that survey of 67,870 households, 68.3% of the 18–25 age
group reported use of alcohol in the past month, 41.8% reported binge
drinking, and 14.7% had heavy alcohol use. Furthermore, 19.7% were
current users of illegal drugs and cigarette smoking was reported by
32.7% of people aged 18–20 and by 38.5% of people aged 21–25. In
Canada, drug and alcohol abuse is common among university students
(Barrett, Darredeau & Pihl, 2006) and often co-occurs with patholog-
ical gambling (Rush, Bassani, Urbanoski & Castel, 2008) and
disordered eating (Piran & Gadalla, 2007). University students are a
Addictive Behaviors 35 (2010) 252–255
⁎ Corresponding author. University of New Brunswick, Department of Psychology, PO
Box 5050, 100 Tucker Park Road, Saint John, NB, Canada E2L-4L5.
E-mail address: lbest@unb.ca (L.A. Best).
0306-4603/$ – see front matter © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.addbeh.2009.09.023
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Addictive Behaviors