estimate of AUD (30.9%) in the current sample was slightly elevated in comparison to nationally representative samples (Grant et al., 2015; Hawkins et al., 2010). Therefore, findings in this population may not be generalizable to a more heterogeneous community; however, CPA and other risk factor prevalence estimates are comparable to larger epidemiologic samples (Hasin & Grant, 2015). Additionally, our sample was limited to African American and European American women only and did not investigate CPA experience, endorsement, and predictive value in ethnic subgroups of AAs and EAs or other minority groups (e.g., Hispanics or mixed race). As Hispanics have been shown to experience even higher prevalence of CPA than African Americans (Finkelhor et al., 2005; Hawkins et al., 2010) and ethnic variation within racial groups in alcohol problems and exposure to CPA have been reported (Brown, Donato, Laske, & Duncan, 2013), examining differential reporting and the impact of CPA on AUD in racial subgroups and other ethnic populations might yield different results. Furthermore, the current findings may not generalize to men, who have been reported to experience CPA at high rates and may have different endorsement patterns as well as different associations with AUD than those reported for the female-only