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Higher Levels Of Alcohol Use Research Articles

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187 Articles

Published in last 50 years

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  • Patterns Of Alcohol Use
  • Patterns Of Alcohol Use
  • Heavy Alcohol Use
  • Heavy Alcohol Use
  • Alcohol Use Risk
  • Alcohol Use Risk
  • Drinking Levels
  • Drinking Levels
  • Alcohol-related Problems
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Articles published on Higher Levels Of Alcohol Use

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Social network alcohol use is associated with individual-level alcohol use among Black sexually minoritized men and gender-expansive people: Findings from the Neighborhoods and Networks (N2) cohort study.

Black sexually minoritized men and gender-expansive people (SGM), including transgender women, have higher levels of alcohol use and experience greater negative consequences from alcohol consumption than the general population. We investigated the role of multilevel factors contributing to alcohol use among these groups. We analyzed data collected from HIV-negative participants in the Neighborhoods and Network (N2) cohort study in Chicago, IL (N = 138). Participants completed a social network inventory (November 2018-April 2019) and reported alcohol use (frequency, quantity, and frequency of binge drinking) during a quantitative assessment. We used stepwise negative binomial regression to identify associations with social network and individual-level alcohol use while controlling for sociodemographic variables. Most participants drank alcohol in the past month (68%), with a mean of 2.5 drinks (SD = 1.9) per drinking day. Participants nominated 377 confidants (Mnominated = 2.7), of whom 93% were Black and 78% were friends/family. Among the confidants, 30% drank alcohol at least several times per week. Identifying as Latine (RR = 2.21; 95% CI: 1.44-3.10), having a higher Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 score (RR = 1.03; 95%CI: 1.00-1.05), living with a problem drinker during one's childhood (RR = 1.80; 95% CI: 1.39-2.34), and having a greater proportion of regular drinkers in one's social network (RR = 1.49; 95% CI: 1.02-2.17) were positively associated with alcohol use. Black SGM exposed to social network alcohol use during childhood and adulthood reported increased alcohol use. Interventions targeting Black SGM should address social norms around alcohol, intersectional discrimination, and mental health.

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  • Journal IconAlcohol, clinical & experimental research
  • Publication Date IconMar 27, 2025
  • Author Icon Cho-Hee Shrader + 15
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Effects of Alcohol Use and Minority Stress on Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration Among Transgender and Gender Diverse People.

Intimate partner violence (IPV) is highly prevalent among transgender and gender diverse (TGD) adults. Integrated theories of minority stress and alcohol-related IPV suggest that minority stress risk and protective factors should interact with alcohol use to predict IPV, although this has never been examined in TGD adults. Thus, we examined the synergistic influence of alcohol use, minority stress, and TGD community connectedness on IPV perpetration among TGD adults. A sample of 137 TGD adults completed a cross-sectional survey assessing minority stressors (i.e., internalized transnegativity, identity outness), TGD community connectedness, alcohol use/problems, and IPV perpetration (i.e., psychological, physical, and gender minority identity-specific abuse). We regressed each form of IPV perpetration on alcohol use/problems and tested the moderating effect of internalized transnegativity, identity outness, and community connectedness on the association between alcohol use/problems and IPV perpetration. The association between alcohol use/problems and all forms of IPV perpetration was moderated by internalized transnegativity and identity outness, but not TGD community connectedness. Alcohol use/problems related to each form of IPV perpetration at low and medium, but not high, levels of identity outness and internalized transnegativity. Alcohol use/problems are an important risk factor for IPV perpetration among TGD adults and this association may be exacerbated by less identity outness. Further, internalized transnegativity might not influence IPV risk at high levels of alcohol use. TGD-affirming IPV prevention programs might focus on reducing alcohol use and related problems while providing a safe and accessible space for TGD individuals at various levels of identity outness.

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  • Journal IconJournal of studies on alcohol and drugs
  • Publication Date IconMar 1, 2025
  • Author Icon Evan J Basting + 4
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Unmasking Distress: An Analysis of COVID-19’s Mental Health Impact on Nurses in South Africa

Background:The acute mental health challenges faced by nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic have the potential to result in long-lasting psychological impacts. Promoting the mental health of nurses is crucial not only to safeguard their wellbeing but also to ensure the delivery of optimal patient care.Objective:This study sought to ascertain the extended mental health impact of the COVID-19 pandemic among nurses in South Africa.Methods:Participants involved nurses working at four hospitals in the Western Cape province: Helderberg, TC Newman, Stellenbosch, and Tygerberg. A convenience sample of nurses (N = 264) from the four hospitals participated in the study. Data collection involved an online survey, which included a comprehensive battery of psychological measures, such as fear of COVID-19, perceived vulnerability to disease, anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), alcohol use, and worry about COVID-19 infection.Results:The mean age of participants was 34.4 (SD = 7.9), with a majority being female (82%). Age was positively correlated with hopelessness and life satisfaction but negatively associated with fear of COVID-19 and symptoms of anxiety, PTSD, alcohol use, and depression. Nurses in the private sector reported higher levels of alcohol use and PTSD than nurses in public, while married and partnered nurses reported reduced levels of anxiety compared to their unmarried counterparts. Higher education levels were associated with reduced adverse mental health outcomes.Conclusion:Psychological distress among nurses was exacerbated even after the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Potential areas of concern are highlighted, indicating the need for targeted interventions.

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  • Journal IconWestern Journal of Nursing Research
  • Publication Date IconFeb 3, 2025
  • Author Icon Phillipa Haine + 4
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Effects of happiness and burnout on alcohol and drug abuse among officers of the police force in Ibadan, Nigeria

Drug abuse as well as its correlates is less researched among law enforcement officers in Nigeria than the general populations. This study examines the prevalence and impact of happiness (authentic and fluctuating) and burnout as psychological predictors of alcohol and drug abuse among officers of the Nigeria Police Force. A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 297 Nigerian police officers in Ibadan, Nigeria, with a structured survey tool comprising Authentic Happiness Scale, Burnout Assessment Tool, Drug Use Disorder Identification Test, and Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test. The results revealed burnout significantly predicted higher levels of alcohol use, β = 0.331, t = 6.350, p < 0.01. Authentic happiness predicted less of alcohol use, β = -0.103, t = 2.073, p < 0.05. Fluctuating happiness predicted higher levels of alcohol use, β = 0.329, t = 6.474, p < 0.01. Additionally, burnout significantly predicted increase in the use of psychoactive drugs, β = 0.339, t = 6.260, p < 0.01. Whereas fluctuating happiness significantly predicted higher levels of drug use, β = 0.276, t = 5.235, p < 0.01, authentic happiness did not significantly predict drug use in this study, β = -0.065, t = 1.256, p > 0.05. The study concluded that low levels of authentic happiness, highlevelsof fluctuating happiness, and burnout are significant risk factors of substance abuse among Nigerian police officers. The need for targeted interventions to address these psychological factors and improve the overall well-being of police officers is recommended.

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  • Journal IconAfrican Journal of Alcohol and Drug Abuse
  • Publication Date IconJan 1, 2025
  • Author Icon Olubusuyi Fasanu Opeyemi + 2
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Crowdsourcing alcohol billboards in Kampala, Uganda: Examining alcohol advertisement violations

Despite high levels of alcohol use in Uganda, there is a scarcity of research on alcohol marketing, its placement and content. In this field study we evaluated the content of alcohol billboards across Kampala, Uganda using the Alcohol Marketing Assessment Rating Tool (AMART). Of the 27 unique alcohol advertisements evaluated, the nine-member review panel found that 23 contained at least one violation yielding a violation rate of 85%. Given the high number of violations, our recommendation is that future alcohol billboard advertisements within Kampala be reviewed and approved by a governing body for compliance with alcohol advertisement standards.

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  • Journal IconInternational Journal of Alcohol and Drug Research
  • Publication Date IconAug 11, 2024
  • Author Icon Monica Swahn, Ph.D + 3
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Sexual Minority Identity and Risky Alcohol Use: the Moderating Role of Aggressive Behavior.

Adolescent alcohol use has significant consequences for concurrent and longitudinal health and wellbeing, with sexual minority youth consistently reporting higher levels of alcohol use than their heterosexual peers. Understanding how individual-difference variables like aggressive behavior are associated with variability in sexual minority adolescents' higher levels of alcohol use offers novel theoretical insight into this vulnerability. The 81,509 participants were drawn from the Profiles of Student life: Attitudes and Behavior Study. They were ages 14-17 years (M = 15.38, SD = 1.09) and 50.1% were cisgender girls. For sexual identity, 88% were heterosexual, 5% were mostly heterosexual, were 4% bisexual, were 1% mostly gay or lesbian, and were 1% being gay or lesbian. Participants reported on alcohol use, aggressive behavior, and sexual identity. Gay/lesbian and mostly gay/lesbian adolescents who reported higher aggressive behavior had higher levels of alcohol use than their heterosexual peers who also reported higher aggressive behavior. The way in which aggressive behavior amplified the link between mostly gay/lesbian and gay/lesbian identities and alcohol use suggests the need for more research examining how this trait may heighten both exposure and reaction to minority stressors among some subgroups of sexual minority youth.

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  • Journal IconJournal of youth and adolescence
  • Publication Date IconJul 22, 2024
  • Author Icon Alexa Martin-Storey + 3
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Prevalence of alcohol use by gender and HIV status in rural Uganda.

Alcohol use is a major contributor to mortality and morbidity worldwide. Uganda has a high level of alcohol use per capita. Compared to men, women are less likely to consume alcohol globally; however, women who drink have increased risks for co-occurring conditions, including depression, intimate partner violence, and HIV. This study assessed the prevalence of alcohol use and correlates of harmful alcohol use by gender and HIV status in rural Uganda. We used cross-sectional data from a study among women and men aged 15-59 residing in rural, central Uganda and accepting home-based HIV testing (Nov 2017 to Dec 2020). We estimated the prevalence of levels of alcohol use (categorized as no alcohol use (score 0), low (score 1-3 for men; 1-2 for women), medium (score 4-5 for men; 3-5 for women), high (score 6-7), and very-high (score 8-12) use with the AUDIT-C), stratified by gender and HIV status. We assessed correlates of harmful alcohol use using multivariable logistic regression models for women and men. Among 18,460 participants, 67% (95% CI: 66-67%) reported no alcohol use, 16% (95% CI: 16-17%) reported low, 5% (95% CI: 4.8-5%) reported medium, 5% (95% CI: 4-5%) reported high, and 3% (95% CI: 2.8-3) reported very high alcohol use. Compared to women, men were more likely to report alcohol use (Chi-squared p-value<0.0001). People diagnosed with HIV (both newly diagnosed and previously aware of their status prior to home-based HIV testing) were more likely to report low, medium, high, and very high alcohol use compared to those who were HIV negative (Chi-squared p-value<0.0001). Among women, those who were newly diagnosed were more likely report alcohol use, compared to those who were HIV negative. In multivariable models, being newly diagnosed with HIV (compared to HIV negative) increased the odds of harmful alcohol use among women, but not men. While alcohol use was higher among men and people living with HIV, being newly diagnosed with HIV had a stronger relationship with harmful alcohol use among women than men. More research is needed to understand how alcohol use may increase the risks of HIV acquisition among women and to identify gender-responsive services to address harmful alcohol use and increase access to HIV testing and linkage to care for women who use harmful levels of alcohol.

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  • Journal IconPloS one
  • Publication Date IconJul 16, 2024
  • Author Icon Adriane Wynn + 13
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Disaggregating within- and between-person associations to test the aversive transmission of alcohol use in late adolescence through adulthood.

The theory of aversive transmission posits that children of parents who have an alcohol use disorder (AUD) may abstain or limit their own alcohol use because they believe themselves to be at risk of developing problems with alcohol. The present study examined relationships among parental AUD, perceived parental AUD, perceived risk for AUD, addiction avoidance reasons for limiting alcohol use, and alcohol use using a random intercept cross-lagged panel model. Participants (N = 805; 48% female; 28% Latinx) were from a longitudinal study investigating intergenerational transmission of AUD. Parental AUD, perceived parental AUD, perceived risk for AUD, addiction avoidance reasons for limiting alcohol use, and alcohol use (quantity, frequency, and frequency of heavy drinking) were measured every 5 years from late adolescence (Mage = 20) to adulthood (Mage = 32). Random intercept cross-lagged panel models tested whether there were stable between-person relations or time-varying within-person relations among these variables. At the between-person level, perceived parental AUD predicted greater addiction avoidance reasons for limiting alcohol use and greater perceived risk. Those with greater addiction avoidance reasons for limiting alcohol use were less likely to use any alcohol and drank less frequently. Parental AUD was associated with higher levels of alcohol use as well as perceived risk. No consistent cross-lagged paths were found at the within-person level. Study findings were at the between-person level rather than the within-person level. Future work on aversive transmission is needed to better understand this subgroup of children of parents with AUD. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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  • Journal IconPsychology of addictive behaviors : journal of the Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors
  • Publication Date IconApr 25, 2024
  • Author Icon A R Georgeson + 3
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IJCM_189A: Prevalence of Substance use and associated factors among Undergraduate Medical students in a medical school in Jammu City of UT of J&amp;K

Background: Globally, the available literature indicates a disturbing and increasing trend of high levels of alcohol use, illicit drug use and misuse of prescription psychoactive drugs among the medical students. This interferes with the learning of medical students because of the cognitive and psychological impact the substance use can have on an individual and is also a cause of concern because of the direct negative impact substance use can have on the safety of patients, not to mention the conduct and efficiency of future doctors. Objectives: To estimate the prevalence of substance use and the association of various socio-demographic factors associated with substance use among Undergraduate Medical students. Methodology: This was a cross-sectional study conducted among 482 Undergraduate Medical students pursuing M.B.B.S. at GMC Jammu from September to mid-November 2023. First of all the socio-demographic data was collected, followed by an assessment of substance use. It was done using the WHO ASSIST questionnaire, which was distributed to the participants in electronic format (Google form). The participants were instructed to read and answer each question honestly and to the best of their knowledge. Proportions with 95% Confidence Interval were used to summarize the substance use. Results: A total of 482 Medical undergraduates participated in the study. The mean age of the study participants was 20 years (± 1.34). The substance with the most prevalent use was alcohol (12.2%). Tobacco, sedatives and cannabis consumption was reported to be 6%, 1.9% and 1.5% respectively among the respondents. Conclusion: Despite being aware of the potential hazards, medical students continue substance abuse, which is indicative of a lack of awareness about one’s health as well as increased peer and academic pressure and a lack of parental supervision. Proper counselling with well-planned policies should be implemented to address the evil of substance abuse among aspiring doctors.

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  • Journal IconIndian Journal of Community Medicine
  • Publication Date IconApr 1, 2024
  • Author Icon Sakshi Manhas + 1
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Alcohol Use and Moffitt's Maturity Gap Thesis for Adolescent Offending: An Evolutionary Perspective and Analysis.

While a wealth of research has focused on testing several arguments from Moffitt's developmental taxonomy of antisocial behavior-mainly the presence of life-course-persistent vs. adolescence-limited offending and predictors of each trajectory-much less attention has been devoted to examining how evolutionarily adaptive lifestyle factors common during adolescence may condition the relationship between the maturity gap and delinquent offending. One factor that may play a role during this period of development is alcohol use, as many adolescents begin to experiment with consuming alcohol in varying degrees in social settings to model adult-like behaviors. Yet presently much is unknown about the role of alcohol use on the association between the maturity gap and delinquency. The current study aims to address this void in the literature by analyzing data from a U.S. sample of adolescent males (N = 1,276) to assess whether alcohol use moderates the relationship between the maturity gap and delinquent behavior. Findings suggest that the maturity gap is associated with delinquent behavior and that the association becomes weaker at higher levels of alcohol use. The implications of these findings for Moffitt's maturity gap thesis and male offending from an evolutionary perspective are discussed.

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  • Journal IconEvolutionary Psychology
  • Publication Date IconJan 1, 2024
  • Author Icon Meghan L Royle + 1
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An Examination of Bidirectional Associations Between Alcohol Use and Internalizing Symptoms Among Adolescents During the COVID-19 Pandemic

An Examination of Bidirectional Associations Between Alcohol Use and Internalizing Symptoms Among Adolescents During the COVID-19 Pandemic

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  • Journal IconJournal of Adolescent Health
  • Publication Date IconDec 11, 2023
  • Author Icon Mahmood R Gohari + 4
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Alcohol use polygenic risk score, social support, and alcohol use among European American and African American adults.

Alcohol use is influenced by genetic and environmental factors. We examined the interactive effects between genome-wide polygenic risk scores for alcohol use (alc-PRS) and social support in relation to alcohol use among European American (EA) and African American (AA) adults across sex and developmental stages (emerging adulthood, young adulthood, and middle adulthood). Data were drawn from 4,011 EA and 1,274 AA adults from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism who were between ages 18-65 and had ever used alcohol. Participants completed the Semi-Structured Assessment for the Genetics of Alcoholism and provided saliva or blood samples for genotyping. Results indicated that social support from friends, but not family, moderated the association between alc-PRS and alcohol use among EAs and AAs (only in middle adulthood for AAs); alc-PRS was associated with higher levels of alcohol use when friend support was low, but not when friend support was high. Associations were similar across sex but differed across developmental stages. Findings support the important role of social support from friends in buffering genetic risk for alcohol use among EA and AA adults and highlight the need to consider developmental changes in the role of social support in relation to alcohol use.

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  • Journal IconDevelopment and psychopathology
  • Publication Date IconOct 2, 2023
  • Author Icon Jinni Su + 20
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Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration Among Sexual Minority Young Adults: Associations With Alcohol Use, PTSD Symptoms, Internalized Homophobia, and Heterosexist Discrimination.

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, queer, and other sexual minority (LGBQ+) young adults report similar or higher rates of intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration than their heterosexual peers. Elevated IPV risk among LGBQ+ young adults may be attributable to experiencing heterosexist discrimination and internalized homophobia. In addition, LGBQ+ people report disproportionate posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms, alcohol use, and IPV perpetration in dating relationships. Thus, this study explored which combinations of IPV risk factors (i.e., experiencing heterosexist discrimination, internalized homophobia, PTSD symptoms, alcohol use) related to forms of IPV perpetration, inclusive of psychological, physical, and sexual forms, in a sample of 342 LGBQ+ young adults. Internalized homophobia was related to psychological IPV perpetration at high and medium levels of PTSD symptoms and only high levels of alcohol use. PTSD symptoms and alcohol use interacted to predict psychological IPV perpetration; and PTSD symptoms related to increased psychological IPV perpetration at high and medium, but not low, alcohol use levels. Alcohol use was positively related to physical IPV perpetration. No other risk factors or interactions were significantly related to physical or sexual IPV perpetration. Results were consistent with prior findings that linked internalized homophobia, alcohol use, and PTSD symptoms to IPV perpetration and highlight the interacting nature of these IPV perpetration risk factors. Comprehensive IPV interventions with LGBQ+ young adults should evaluate the impact of simultaneously targeting these multiple IPV risk factors considering their interacting contributions to IPV perpetration risk. More research is needed to examine the temporal relations between minority stress, PTSD symptoms, alcohol use, and IPV perpetration.

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  • Journal IconJournal of interpersonal violence
  • Publication Date IconAug 31, 2023
  • Author Icon Evan J Basting + 6
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Impact of Alcohol Use, Traumatic Stress, and Cigarette Smoking on Cognitive Functioning in Veterans With Co-occurring Alcohol Use Disorder and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.

Alcohol use disorder (AUD) and PTSD have high rates of co-occurrence in U.S. Military Veterans resulting in incrementally worse functional outcomes relative to having either one of these disorders alone. Cognitive dysfunction can impede one's ability to benefit from standard behavioral AUD and PTSD treatments. Cigarette smoking is also highly prevalent among U.S. Military Veterans, and cognitive dysfunction is associated with chronic cigarette use among individuals with AUD and PTSD independently. However, much less is known about to what extent cigarette smoking further impairs cognitive functioning in individuals with both co-occurring AUD and PTSD. U.S. Veterans with co-occurring AUD and PTSD (n = 162) completed a comprehensive cognitive assessment covering various domains: working memory, processing speed, mental switching, cognitive inhibition, auditory-verbal learning, auditory-verbal memory, and verbal fluency. To examine the impact of alcohol use, traumatic stress, and cigarette smoking on cognitive function, we conducted a three-way interaction examining the moderated effects of smoking status on the association between alcohol use and PTSD symptoms on a composite domain of global cognition. Smoking status in Veterans with co-occurring AUD and PTSD moderated the relationship between alcohol use and global cognition (P = .042), such that higher levels of alcohol use in the past week were related to worse global cognitive function among Veterans cigarette smokers (P = .015) but not among nonsmokers (P = .833). On follow-up analyses of individual cognitive domains, greater alcohol use in the past week was associated with lower cognitive inhibition in smokers but not nonsmokers, with traumatic stress symptoms moderating this effect (P = .039). Additionally, smoking status moderated the relationship between alcohol use and auditory-verbal learning, such that there was a differential relationship between alcohol use and auditory-verbal learning between smokers and nonsmokers. Overall, results provide evidence for the compounding impact of alcohol use, traumatic stress, and cigarette smoking on cognitive functioning. Impaired cognitive performance on a global level as well as on individual domains of cognitive inhibition and auditory-verbal learning were evident. Cognitive dysfunction may impede a Veteran's ability to benefit from therapeutic treatment, and these cognitive domains may represent potential targets for cognitive training efforts. Further, study results support smoking cessation initiatives and smoke-free policies enacted at Veterans Affairs healthcare facilities and medical centers.

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  • Journal IconMilitary medicine
  • Publication Date IconJul 22, 2023
  • Author Icon Jessica P Y Hua + 3
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A systematic review of relative risks for the relationships between chronic alcohol use and the occurrence of disease.

Alcohol use is causally linked to the development of and mortality from numerous diseases. The aim of this study is to provide an update to a previous systematic review of meta-analyses that quantify the sex-specific dose-response risk relationships between chronic alcohol use and disease occurrence and/or mortality. An updated systematic search of multiple databases was performed in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses criteria to identify meta-analyses published from January 1, 2017, to March 8, 2021, which quantified the risk relationships between chronic alcohol use and the risk of disease occurrence and/or mortality. This systematic review was not preregistered. The comparator was people who have never consumed at least one standard drink of alcohol. Measurements included relative risks, odds ratios, and hazard ratios of disease occurrence and/or mortality based on long-term alcohol intake measured in grams per day. The systematic search yielded 5953 articles, of which 14 were included in the narrative review. All diseases showed an increased risk of occurrence as alcohol use increased. At all doses examined, alcohol had a significant detrimental effect on tuberculosis, lower respiratory infections, oral cavity and pharyngeal cancers, esophageal cancer, colorectal cancer, liver cancer, laryngeal cancer, epilepsy, hypertension, liver cirrhosis, and pancreatitis (among men). For ischemic heart disease, ischemic stroke, and intracerebral hemorrhage, protective effects from low-dose chronic alcohol use among both men and women were observed. Low-dose alcohol consumption also had a protective effect for diabetes mellitus and pancreatitis among women (approximately to 50 g/day and 30 g/day, respectively). Alcohol use increases the risk of numerous infectious and noncommunicable diseases in a dose-response manner. Higher levels of alcohol use have a clear detrimental impact on health; however, at lower levels of use, alcohol can have both disease-specific protective and detrimental effects.

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  • Journal IconAlcohol: Clinical and Experimental Research
  • Publication Date IconJul 1, 2023
  • Author Icon Christine Levesque + 8
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Intolerance of Uncertainty, Negative Reinforcement Alcohol Use Motives, and Hazardous Drinking in College Students with Clinically Elevated Worry

Background: Hazardous drinking has remained high for college students in recent years, and individuals who endorse drinking to cope with emotional distress or to conform socially report higher levels of alcohol use. Intolerance of uncertainty, a core process underlying generalized anxiety disorder, has been linked to negative reinforcement drinking motives; however, no research, to date, has examined the role of intolerance of uncertainty in terms of alcohol use motives and hazardous drinking among individuals with generalized anxiety disorder. Objective: The current study was designed to examine the relationships between intolerance of uncertainty, coping and conformity alcohol use motives, and hazardous drinking in an analogue generalized anxiety disorder sample. Methods: Participants were 323 college students (Mage = 19.25, SD = 2.23, Range = 18–40) who endorsed past-year alcohol use and clinically elevated levels of worry. Self-report measures were completed online for course credit. Results: Partially consistent with our hypotheses, uncertainty paralysis predicted greater levels of coping motives, but not conformity motives. Desire for predictability did not predict either drinking motive. Mediation analyses revealed that there was a significant indirect effect of uncertainty paralysis on more hazardous drinking through greater coping motives. Conclusion: Overall, these findings highlight the potential utility of targeting behavioral inhibition due to uncertainty to reduce unhealthy coping via alcohol use and subsequent hazardous alcohol use.

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  • Journal IconSubstance Use &amp; Misuse
  • Publication Date IconMay 22, 2023
  • Author Icon Jessica G Bimstein + 3
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Alcohol and aging - An area of increasing concern.

Alcohol and aging - An area of increasing concern.

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  • Journal IconAlcohol
  • Publication Date IconMar 1, 2023
  • Author Icon Aaron M White + 3
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Prevalence of, and factors associated with, alcohol use disorder among young adults (aged 15–24 years) living with HIV/AIDS in low-income and middle-income countries: protocol for a systematic review

IntroductionAlcohol use is a global driver of HIV infection and disease progression, mediated through risky behaviour and poor antiretroviral adherence. Most studies about the burden of alcohol use among people...

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  • Journal IconBMJ Open
  • Publication Date IconJan 1, 2023
  • Author Icon Raymond Felix Odokonyero + 6
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Military service and alcohol use: a systematic narrative review

BackgroundDespite research highlighting the role of alcohol in military life, specifically in relation to mental health and certain combat experiences, there is no synthesised evidence looking at the relationship between military service and alcohol use.AimsTo synthesize and examine evidence exploring the relationship between military service and alcohol use.MethodsSix databases were examined across a 10-year period. Papers were included if they involved a military population and focused on alcohol use. From 4046 papers identified, 29 papers were included in the review.ResultsMilitary characteristics and experience were linked to high levels of alcohol use across military populations. Societal and cultural factors also played a role in alcohol use in military populations. Predatory behaviour of alcohol establishments, pressures to conform, an acceptance of alcohol use, and the role of religious services and military affiliated social networks were all considered. Excessive drinking impacted physical and mental health. Those diagnosed with PTSD and associated symptoms appeared to have greater alcohol use.ConclusionsThis review identified certain characteristics and experiences of military service that are associated with higher levels of alcohol use. It is important to identify risk factors for alcohol misuse to develop appropriate policy, targeting prevention.

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  • Journal IconOccupational Medicine (Oxford, England)
  • Publication Date IconJun 8, 2022
  • Author Icon A K Osborne + 3
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Longitudinal Association Between Intimate Partner Violence and Alcohol Use in a Population Cohort of South African Women.

Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a common traumatic stressor for women worldwide, especially for women living in low-and-middle-income countries. One of the most common correlates of IPV victimization is alcohol use, but the dynamics of IPV and drinking among women are not well understood. Although some research suggests that women drink in the aftermath of IPV to cope with distress related to the violence they experienced, other studies imply that higher levels of alcohol use among one or both partners in a relationship make violence more likely. In this study, we examine this question in a secondary analysis of a longitudinal study of a population cohort of pregnant women in South Africa (N = 1238) using a Bayesian approach to latent growth curve structural equation modeling. Results indicate that on average, IPV decreases and alcohol use increases over time and that these trajectories are associated with each other. Further, results suggest that although IPV drives drinking (rather than the other way around), higher average levels of alcohol use are associated with a slower decrease in IPV. Findings have implications for future research on the association between IPV and alcohol use, as well as for clinical intervention for women who experienced IPV.

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  • Journal IconJournal of Interpersonal Violence
  • Publication Date IconApr 26, 2022
  • Author Icon Matthew M Yalch + 3
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