In this study, self-efficacy yielded a statistically significant, moderate path coefficient of -0.28. Self-efficacy is an internal belief a person has to perform a particular behavior within a specific context. In this study, results yielded a negative path coefficient, which indicate an inverse relationship between self-efficacy and behavioral intention. Thus, as self-efficacy became stronger, intention to high-risk drink lessened, and vice versa. For example, if participants believed they had the confidence to refuse alcohol consumption then they tended not to engage in high-risk drinking. Collins and Carey (2007) also found a negative link between self-efficacy and intention. This finding indicates that prevention efforts should target college student's self-efficacy, perhaps focusing on peer refusal skills