115 results
Search Results
2. Alcohol use and alcohol use disorders in sub‐Saharan Africa: A systematic review and meta‐analysis.
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Belete, Habte, Yimer, Tesfa Mekonen, Dawson, Danielle, Espinosa, Dorothy C., Ambaw, Fentie, Connor, Jason P., Chan, Gary, Hides, Leanne, and Leung, Janni
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SUBSTANCE abuse risk factors , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *RISK assessment , *RESEARCH funding , *META-analysis , *DISEASE prevalence , *HEALTH insurance exchanges , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDLINE , *TEENAGERS' conduct of life , *ALCOHOLISM , *ALCOHOL drinking , *ONLINE information services , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *LONGEVITY ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Background and aims: Population‐level alcohol use data are available from high‐income countries, but limited research has been conducted in sub‐Saharan Africa. This systematic review and meta‐analysis aimed to summarize population‐level alcohol use in sub‐Saharan Africa. Method: Databases searched included PubMed, EMBASE, PsycINFO and AJOL, without language restrictions. Searches were also conducted in the Global Health Data Exchange (GHDx) and Google Scholar. Search terms encompassed 'substance' or 'substance‐related disorders' and 'prevalence' and 'sub‐Saharan Africa'. We included general population studies on alcohol use (including any use, high‐risk alcohol use and alcohol use disorders) from 2018 onwards. Prevalence data for alcohol use among sub‐Saharan African adolescents (10–17) and adults (18+) were extracted. Analyses included life‐time and past 12‐ and 6‐month alcohol use. Results: We included 141 papers. Among adolescents, the life‐time prevalence of alcohol use was 23.3% [95% confidence interval (CI) = 11.3–37.1%], 36.2% (CI = 18.4–56.1%) in the past year and 11.3% (CI = 4.5–20.4%) in the past 6 months. Among adolescents, 12‐month prevalence of alcohol use disorder and alcohol dependence were 7.7% (CI = 0.0–27.8%) and 4.1% (CI = 1.4–7.9%), respectively. Among adults, the life‐time prevalence of alcohol use was 34.9% (CI = 17.7–54.1%), 27.1% (CI = 5.0–56.4%) in the past year and 32.2% (CI = 19.8–46.0%) in the past 6 months. Among adults, the 12‐month prevalence of alcohol use disorder and alcohol dependence were 9.5% (CI = 0.0–30.4%) and 4.3% (CI = 0.8–9.8%), respectively. The highest weighted life‐time prevalence of alcohol use, 86.4%, was reported in Tanzania among adults. The highest weighted past 6‐month prevalence of alcohol use, 80.6%, was found in Zambia among adolescents. Conclusion: Alcohol use patterns vary across countries and subregions within sub‐Saharan Africa, and comprehensive population‐level data on alcohol use remain scarce in numerous sub‐Saharan African countries. The prevalence of alcohol use disorder is common among adolescents in sub‐Saharan Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Methodological issues attached to the alcohol Stroop paradigm: comments on a paper by Sharma, Albery & Cook (2001).
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Cox, W. Miles, Pothos, Emmanuel M., Johnsen, Bjørn Helge, and Laberg, Jon Christian
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ALCOHOLISM , *PEOPLE with alcoholism , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
Comments on methodological issues linked to the alcohol Stroop paradigm in the paper of Sharma, Albery and Cook. Assessment on the attentional bias of drinkers for alcohol-related stimuli; Objections to the card format used in the presentation of the Stroop stimuli; Employment of the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test.
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- 2001
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4. Is minimum unit pricing for alcohol having the intended effects on alcohol consumption in Scotland?
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Holmes, John
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ALCOHOLIC beverages , *ALCOHOLISM , *ALCOHOL drinking , *COST analysis , *BUSINESS , *GOVERNMENT policy , *FINANCIAL stress , *ETHANOL , *EVALUATION - Abstract
Background and Aims: The Scottish Government introduced minimum unit pricing (MUP) for alcohol on 1 May 2018. This means retailers in Scotland cannot sell alcohol to consumers for less than £0.50 per unit (1 UK unit = 8 g ethanol). The Government intended the policy to increase the price of cheap alcohol, cut alcohol consumption overall and particularly among those drinking at hazardous or harmful levels, and ultimately reduce alcohol‐related harm. This paper aims to summarise and assess the evidence to date evaluating the impact of MUP on alcohol consumption and related behaviours in Scotland. Argument: Evidence from analyses of population‐level sales data suggest, all else being equal, MUP reduced the volume of alcohol sold in Scotland by ~ 3.0% to 3.5%, with the largest reductions affecting cider and spirits sales. Analyses of two time series datasets on household‐level alcohol purchasing and individual‐level alcohol consumption suggest reductions in purchasing and consumption among those drinking at hazardous and harmful levels, but offer conflicting results for those drinking at the most harmful levels. These subgroup analyses are methodologically robust, but the underlying datasets have important limitations as they rely on non‐random sampling strategies. Further studies identified no clear evidence of reduced alcohol consumption among those with alcohol dependence or those presenting to emergency departments and sexual health clinics, some evidence of increased financial strain among people with dependence and no evidence of wider negative outcomes arising from changes in alcohol consumption behaviours. Conclusions: Minimum unit pricing for alcohol in Scotland has led to reduced consumption, including among heavier drinkers. However, there is uncertainty regarding its impact on those at greatest risk and some limited evidence of negative outcomes, specifically financial strain, among people with alcohol dependence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Emotion regulation in substance use disorders: a systematic review and meta‐analysis.
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Stellern, Jordan, Xiao, Ke Bin, Grennell, Erin, Sanches, Marcos, Gowin, Joshua L., and Sloan, Matthew E.
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SUBSTANCE abuse diagnosis , *SUBSTANCE abuse & psychology , *ONLINE information services , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *NARCOTICS , *META-analysis , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *ALCOHOLISM , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *CROSS-sectional method , *METHAMPHETAMINE , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EMOTION regulation , *MEDLINE , *DATA analysis software , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *COMPULSIVE behavior - Abstract
Background and aims: The ability to regulate emotions effectively has been associated with resilience to psychopathology. Individuals with substance use disorders (SUDs) have been shown to have higher levels of negative emotionality, with some evidence suggesting impairment in emotion regulation compared with individuals without SUDs. However, no previous attempt has been made to systematically review the literature to assess the magnitude of this difference. We aimed to assess the association between SUD diagnosis and emotion regulation as measured by the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS) and Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ) through a systematic review and meta‐analysis of existing findings. Methods: The systematic review was conducted using PubMed, PsycINFO and Embase. We examined cross‐sectional studies that compared a SUD group with a control group and measured emotion regulation using the DERS or the ERQ. The primary analysis focused on papers using the DERS, as this was the predominant instrument in the literature. Results: Twenty‐two studies met our primary analysis criteria, representing 1936 individuals with a SUD and 1567 controls. Individuals with SUDs relative to controls had significantly greater DERS scores, with a mean difference of 21.44 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 16.49–26.40, P < 0.001] and Hedges' g = 1.05 (95% CI = 0.86–1.24, P < 0.001). The difference was robust, remaining significant after removing outliers and studies with high risk of bias. Individuals with SUDs demonstrated poorer emotion regulation on each subscale of the DERS, with the largest deficits in the Strategies and Impulse subscales. The ERQ analysis revealed greater use of expressive suppression in those with SUDs relative to controls (Hedges' g = 0.76, 95% CI = 0.25–1.28, P = 0.004). Conclusions: People with substance use disorders appear to have greater difficulties in emotion regulation than people without substance use disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Policy influence and the legalized cannabis industry: learnings from other addictive consumption industries.
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Adams, Peter J., Rychert, Marta, and Wilkins, Chris
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MEDICAL marijuana laws , *DRUG abuse laws , *DRUG addiction , *ALCOHOLISM , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *MATHEMATICAL models , *GAMBLING , *THEORY - Abstract
Background and aim: New Zealand has recently legalized medicinal cannabis and has explored the possibility of legalizing large‐scale recreational cannabis supply. In the process, concerns have emerged regarding whether corporations involved in the large‐scale production and sale of legalized cannabis will invest in tactics of influence with policymakers and the public. This paper aimed to examine the various ways a legalized cannabis industry could seek to influence governments and the public in the New Zealand reform context. Method: Based on the study of industry tactics with alcohol, tobacco and gambling, we applied a three‐chain model of industry influence that breaks tactics into the 'public good', 'knowledge' and 'political' chains. Results: Exploratory analysis of the nascent cannabis industry's activity in New Zealand provided signs of industry influence strategies related to all three chains. The medicinal cannabis industry has associated the establishment of a legal cannabis sector with regional economic development and employment, supported lobbying for recreational law reform, funded NGOs involved in lobbying for law reform, established research partnerships with universities, invited ex‐politicians on advisory boards, and participated in government public sector partnerships. Conclusion: There is emerging evidence that the legal cannabis industry is using strategies to influence the regulatory environment in New Zealand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. Integrating smoking cessation care in alcohol and other drug treatment settings using an organizational change intervention: a systematic review.
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Skelton, Eliza, Tzelepis, Flora, Shakeshaft, Anthony, Guillaumier, Ashleigh, McCrabb, Sam, and Bonevski, Billie
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CIGARETTE smokers , *ALCOHOLISM , *PEOPLE with alcoholism , *SMOKING , *ALCOHOLISM treatment , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *CINAHL database , *HOSPITAL medical staff , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *INTEGRATED health care delivery , *MEDLINE , *ORGANIZATIONAL change , *QUALITY assurance , *SMOKING cessation , *STRATEGIC planning , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *TOBACCO products , *DISCHARGE planning , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DISEASE prevalence - Abstract
Background and Aims: Organizational change interventions involve systems and cultural change within health‐care services to make smoking cessation care delivery part of usual treatment. Six strategies for organizational change have been proposed. This study examined the evidence for organizational change interventions in the alcohol and other drug (AOD) setting on: (a) smoking cessation care; and (b) smoking cessation and cessation‐related outcomes. Methods: A systematic review with narrative synthesis was conducted. MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, EMBASE and Scopus were searched using keywords and MeSH terms from database inception to 1 June 2018. Interventions were assessed against the six organizational change strategies. Results: Of the 5155 papers identified, 14 publications from seven unique studies were included. Most studies employed four or fewer organizational change strategies. The majority (n = 11) were rated weak to moderate in methodological quality. Nine published papers, four unique studies, examined staff reported provision of smoking cessation care; eight reported an increase, one found no change. Three papers, two unique studies, examined client receipt of care; all found significant increases. Three papers, two unique studies, assessed staff smoking prevalence from pre‐ to post‐intervention. Only one study reported a significant reduction in staff smoking prevalence (35.2 versus 21.8%, P = 0.005). Nine papers, six unique studies, assessed client smoking cessation and smoking‐related outcomes. Seven papers reported on client smoking prevalence; two found a significant decrease and five found no change to smoking. Four papers reported on number of cigarettes per day, three found a significant decrease and one found no change. Two papers reported on smoking cessation finding a 10% and a 25% seven‐day point prevalence abstinence post‐discharge from the AOD service. Conclusions: Organizational change interventions within health‐care services to make smoking cessation care delivery part of usual treatment offer promise for increasing smoking cessation care and reducing smoking prevalence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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8. Imaging resilience and recovery in alcohol dependence.
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Charlet, Katrin, Rosenthal, Annika, Lohoff, Falk W., Heinz, Andreas, and Beck, Anne
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BRAIN imaging , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *ALCOHOLISM treatment , *NEUROBIOLOGY , *REHABILITATION of people with alcoholism , *DISEASE progression , *PREVENTION of alcoholism , *PSYCHOLOGY , *BIOMARKERS , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *BASAL ganglia , *DIAGNOSIS of alcoholism , *POSITRON emission tomography , *FRONTAL lobe , *GLUCOSE metabolism , *ALCOHOLISM , *COGNITION , *CONVALESCENCE , *GENETICS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MEDLINE , *MENTAL illness , *NEURAL conduction , *NEUROPLASTICITY , *ONLINE information services , *RECIDIVISM , *SEX distribution , *SMOKING , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *COMORBIDITY , *TASK performance , *EXECUTIVE function , *GENOTYPES , *PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Background and aims: Resilience and recovery are of increasing importance in the field of alcohol dependence (AD). This paper describes how imaging studies in man can be used to assess the neurobiological correlates of resilience and, if longitudinal, of disease trajectories, progression rates and markers for recovery to inform treatment and prevention options. Methods: Original papers on recovery and resilience in alcohol addiction and its neurobiological correlates were identified from PubMed and have been analyzed and condensed within a systematic literature review. Results: Findings deriving from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) studies have identified links between increased resilience and less task‐elicited neural activation within the basal ganglia, and benefits of heightened neural pre‐frontal cortex (PFC) engagement regarding resilience in a broader sense; namely, resilience against relapse in early abstinence of AD. Furthermore, findings consistently propose at least partial recovery of brain glucose metabolism and executive and general cognitive functioning, as well as structural plasticity effects throughout the brain of alcohol‐dependent patients during the course of short‐, medium‐ and long‐term abstinence, even when patients only lowered their alcohol consumption to a moderate level. Additionally, specific factors were found that appear to influence these observed brain recovery processes in AD, e.g. genotype‐dependent neuronal (re)growth, gender‐specific neural recovery effects, critical interfering effects of psychiatric comorbidities, additional smoking or marijuana influences or adolescent alcohol abuse. Conclusions: Neuroimaging research has uncovered neurobiological markers that appear to be linked to resilience and improved recovery capacities that are furthermore influenced by various factors such as gender or genetics. Consequently, future system‐oriented approaches may help to establish a broad neuroscience‐based research framework for alcohol dependence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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9. Polygenic risk for alcohol misuse is moderated by romantic partnerships.
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Barr, Peter B., Kuo, Sally I‐Chun, Aliev, Fazil, Latvala, Antti, Viken, Richard, Rose, Richard J., Kaprio, Jaakko, Salvatore, Jessica E., and Dick, Danielle M.
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DIAGNOSIS of alcoholism , *ALCOHOLISM , *PREVENTION of alcoholism , *ALCOHOLISM risk factors , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *GENE expression , *GENETIC polymorphisms , *GENOMES , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *INTERVIEWING , *CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders , *REGRESSION analysis , *RISK assessment , *SEX distribution , *TWINS , *ADULTS , *GENETICS - Abstract
Background and Aims: Previous twin research suggests relationship status can moderate underlying genetic liability towards alcohol misuse. This paper examined: (1) whether genome‐wide polygenic scores (GPS) for alcohol consumption are associated with alcohol misuse; (2) whether these GPS are moderated by romantic relationships (gene–environment interaction; G × E) and (3) whether G × E results are consistent across sex. Design: Linear mixed‐effects models were used to test associations between genome‐wide polygenic scores, relationship status and alcohol use/misuse. Setting: Finnish twins born between 1983 and 1987 identified through Finland's central population registry. Participants: An intensively studied subset of Finnish Twin Study (FinnTwin12) during the young adult phase (aged 20–26 years). The analytical sample includes those with complete interview and genetic data (n = 1201). Measurements Key measurements included involvement in a romantic partnership, drinking frequency, intoxication frequency and DSM‐IV alcohol dependence (AD) symptoms. Genome‐wide polygenic scores (GPS) were created from available summary statistics from a large genome‐wide association study (GWAS) of drinks per week. Results: GPS predicted drinking frequency [b = 0.109; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.050, 0.168], intoxication frequency (b = 0.111; 95% CI = 0.054, 0.168) and AD symptoms (b = 0.123; 95% CI = 0.064, 0.182). Having a romantic relationship negatively influenced the association between GPS and drinking frequency (b = −0.105; 95% CI = −0.211, −0.001), intoxication frequency (b = −0.118; 95% CI = −0.220, −0.016) and AD symptoms (b = −0.119; 95% CI = −0.229, −0.009). There was a three‐way interaction between sex, relationship status and GPS for intoxication frequency (b = 0.223; 95% CI = 0.013, 0.433), such that the reduced association between GPS and intoxication frequency for those in a relationship was only apparent in males. We found no evidence of three‐way interactions for drinking frequency or AD symptoms. Conclusions: Being in a romantic relationship reduced the association between genetic predisposition and drinking, high‐risk drinking and alcohol problems. However, for high‐risk drinking the protective effect was limited to males, mapping onto earlier findings suggesting that males benefit more from romantic partnerships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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10. Commentary on Bischof et al.: Empirical and conceptual paradigms for studying secondary impacts of a person's substance use.
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *ALCOHOLISM , *CANNABIS (Genus) , *MENTAL depression , *COMPULSIVE behavior - Abstract
The article comments on a paper by G. Bischof and colleagues on the secondary health impacts of people living and not living with a person's substance use disorder. Topics mentioned include the two elements that can show societal estimates of the people who are seriously affected with person's substance use disorder, the structural factors related to harm to others, and the effect of alcohol consumption.
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- 2022
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11. Underestimation of alcohol consumption in cohort studies and implications for alcohol's contribution to the global burden of disease.
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Stockwell, Tim, Zhao, Jinhui, Sherk, Adam, Rehm, Jürgen, Shield, Kevin, and Naimi, Tim
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ALCOHOLISM , *PEOPLE with alcoholism , *SELF-report inventories , *GLOBAL burden of disease , *MORTALITY of people with alcoholism , *CAUSES of death , *ALCOHOL drinking , *ETHANOL , *LONGITUDINAL method , *POPULATION geography , *SURVEYS , *WORLD health , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) - Abstract
Background and aims: Estimated alcohol consumption from national self‐report surveys is often only 30–40% of official estimates based on sales or taxation data. Global burden of disease (GBD) estimates for alcohol adjust survey estimates up to 80% of total per capita consumption. This assumes that cohort studies needed to estimate relative risks for disease suffer less from under‐reporting than typical national surveys. However, there is limited evidence on which to base that assumption. This paper aims to assess the extent of underestimation of alcohol consumption in cohort studies concerning alcohol and mortality compared with official total consumption estimates. Design Comparisons of estimated per capita consumption from a comprehensive sample of cohort studies against official estimates by country and year. Participants: A total of 1 876 046 participants in 40 cohort studies from 18 countries on alcohol use and all‐cause mortality identified by systematic review. Measurements Alcohol consumption data from the cohort studies were converted into usual grams of ethanol per day and then to total age 15+ per capita consumption. Matched estimates were sourced from the World Health Organization (WHO) Global Health Observatory. Findings The cohort studies had mean coverages of age 15+ per capita alcohol consumption of 61.71% (ranging from 29.19% for Russia to 96.53% for Japan), after weighting estimates by sample size for within‐country estimates and by number of studies per country for the overall estimate. Regional estimates were higher for the United States (66.22%) and lower for western European countries (55.35%). Conclusions: Underestimation of alcohol consumption in cohort studies is less than in typical population surveys. Because some under‐coverage is caused by under‐sampling heavier drinkers, the current practice of uplifting survey estimates to 80% of total population consumption in global burden of disease studies appears to be appropriate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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12. Griffith Edwards, the Addiction Research Unit and research on the criminal justice system.
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Farrell, Michael, Marsden, John, and Strang, John
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ADDICTIONS , *CRIMINAL justice system , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *ALCOHOLISM treatment , *HIV infection risk factors , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *RESEARCH , *ALCOHOLISM , *PEOPLE with alcoholism , *COMMUNITY health services , *CONTINUUM of care , *CRIMINOLOGY , *HEALTH facilities , *HOMELESS persons , *PRISONERS , *GOVERNMENT policy , *LEADERS , *RESEARCH personnel , *SOCIETIES - Abstract
Background This paper reviews the early work of Griffith Edwards and his colleagues on alcohol in the criminal justice system and outlines the direction of research in this area in the Addiction Research Unit in the 1960s and 1970s. The paper outlines the link between that work and work undertaken in the more recent past in this area. Methods The key papers of the authors are reviewed and the impact of this work on policy and practice is discussed. Conclusions There is a rich seam of work on deprived and incarcerated populations that has been under way at the Addiction Research Unit and subsequently the National Addiction Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, London. Griffith Edwards initiated this work that explores the risks and problems experienced by people moving between the health and criminal justice system, and demonstrated the need for better care and continuity across this system [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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13. The alcohol dependence syndrome: a legacy of continuing clinical and scientific importance.
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Stockwell, Tim
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ALCOHOLISM , *DIAGNOSIS of alcoholism , *ALCOHOL-induced disorders , *ALCOHOLISM treatment , *CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders , *LEADERS , *RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
This paper offers some reflections on Griffith Edwards' continuing legacy with particular reference to his and Milton Gross's formulation of alcohol dependence as a 'provisional' clinical syndrome. The ideas and language from this seminal paper have heavily influenced international diagnostic classification systems. However, it is observed that there has also been significant (and increasing) divergence-in particular around the original proposal that dependence and negative alcohol-related consequences are independent, if inevitably inter-related dimensions. This is most apparent in the conflation of alcohol-related problems and dependence phenomena implicit in DSM-V. It is also argued that the alcohol dependence syndrome (ADS) has substantial continuing influence and relevance to current clinical practice. The hypothesis that degree of alcohol dependence is a useful indicator of the possibility of a return to controlled drinking continues to receive support, and underpins the widespread implementation of brief interventions for 'early stage' problem drinkers. It is suggested that the kind of careful clinical observations that underpinned the original concept of alcohol dependence have continuing relevance to the formulation of improved understanding, measurement instruments, diagnostic systems and clinical responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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14. Overlooked and underestimated? Problematic alcohol use in clients recovering from drug dependence.
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Staiger, Petra K., Richardson, Ben, Long, Caroline M., Carr, Victoria, and Marlatt, G. Alan
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *ALCOHOLISM , *CINAHL database , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *MEDLINE , *RESEARCH funding , *SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Aims Despite recognition of the harms related to alcohol misuse and its potential to interfere substantially with sustained recovery from drug dependency, research evaluating drug treatment outcomes has not addressed the issue comprehensively. It has been overlooked possibly because treatment research has been framed according to the primary drug of choice, rather than investigating the interactions between different combinations of drugs and/or alcohol use. This paper reports on a systematic review investigating whether concurrent alcohol use could impede recovery from illicit drug use in two potential ways: first, alcohol could become a substitute addiction and/or secondly, alcohol misuse post-treatment may place an individual at risk for relapse to their primary drug problem. Method A systematic search of four relevant databases was undertaken to identify peer-reviewed, quantitative drug treatment outcome studies that reported alcohol use pre-, post-treatment and follow-up. Results The search revealed 567 papers, of which 13 were assessed as fulfilling the key inclusion criteria.The review indicated inconsistent and therefore inconclusive support for the substitution hypothesis. However, the data revealed consistent support for the hypothesis that alcohol use increases relapse to drug use. Conclusions (i) The potential negative impact of alcohol misuse on drug treatment outcomes remains under-researched and overlooked; (ii) alcohol consumption post-drug treatment may increase the likelihood that an individual will relapse to their primary drug; (ii) existing evidence regarding the substitution hypothesis is inconclusive, although there was an indication that a subgroup of participants will be vulnerable to alcohol becoming the primary addiction instead of drugs. We argue that future drug treatment outcome studies need to include detailed analysis of the influence of alcohol use pre- and post-drug treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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15. Which cost of alcohol? What should we compare it against?
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Bhattacharya, Aveek
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ALCOHOLISM & society , *ALCOHOLISM , *ALCOHOL drinking , *ECONOMICS , *HEALTH policy , *ECONOMIC aspects of diseases , *MEDICAL care costs , *SOCIAL problems - Abstract
This paper explores and develops issues raised by recent debates about the cost of alcohol to England and Wales. It advances two arguments. First, that the commonly used estimates for alcohol harm in England and Wales are outdated, not fully reliable and in need of revisiting. These estimates rely on data that are between 4 and 12 years out of date and sensitive to questionable assumptions and methodological judgements. Secondly, it argues that policymakers, academics and non-governmental organizations should be more careful in their use of these numbers. In particular, it is imperative that the numbers quoted fit the argument advanced. To help guide such appropriate usage, the different types of cost of alcohol are surveyed, alongside some thoughts on the questions they help us to answer and what they imply for policy. For example, comprehensive estimates of the total social cost of alcohol provide an indication of the scale of the problem, but have limited policy relevance. External cost estimates represent a 'lowest common denominator' approach acceptable to most, but require additional assumptions to guide action. Narrower perspectives, such as fiscal, economic or health costs, may be relevant in specific contexts. However, optimal policy should take a holistic view of all the relevant costs and benefits. Similarly, focusing solely on tangible costs may be less controversial, but will result in an under-estimate of the relevant costs of alcohol. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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16. Brief screening questionnaires to identify problem drinking during pregnancy: a systematic review.
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Burns, Ethel, Gray, Ron, and Smith, Lesley A.
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ALCOHOLISM , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *PRENATAL care , *PREGNANCY complications , *OBSTETRICAL emergencies , *MEDICAL screening , *ALCOHOL drinking , *DISSOCIATIVE disorders , *AMNESIA - Abstract
Aims Although prenatal screening for problem drinking during pregnancy has been recommended, guidance on screening instruments is lacking. We investigated the sensitivity, specificity and predictive value of brief alcohol screening questionnaires to identify problem drinking in pregnant women. Methods Electronic databases from their inception to June 2008 were searched, as well as reference lists of eligible papers and related review papers. We sought cohort or cross-sectional studies that compared one or more brief alcohol screening questionnaire(s) with reference criteria obtained using structured interviews to detect ‘at-risk’ drinking, alcohol abuse or dependency in pregnant women receiving prenatal care. Results Five studies (6724 participants) were included. In total, seven instruments were evaluated: TWEAK (Tolerance, Worried, Eye-opener, Amnesia, Kut down), T-ACE [Take (number of drinks), Annoyed, Cut down, Eye-opener], CAGE (Cut down, Annoyed, Guilt, Eye-opener], NET (Normal drinker, Eye-opener, Tolerance), AUDIT (Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test), AUDIT-C (AUDIT-consumption) and SMAST (Short Michigan Alcohol Screening Test). Study quality was generally good, but lack of blinding was a common weakness. For risk drinking sensitivity was highest for T-ACE (69-88%), TWEAK (71–91%) and AUDIT-C (95%), with high specificity (71–89%, 73–83% and 85%, respectively). CAGE and SMAST performed poorly. Sensitivity of AUDIT-C at score ≥3 was high for past year alcohol dependence (100%) or alcohol use disorder (96%) with moderate specificity (71% each). For life-time alcohol dependency the AUDIT at score ≥8 performed poorly. Conclusion T-ACE, TWEAK and AUDIT-C show promise for screening for risk drinking, and AUDIT-C may also be useful for identifying alcohol dependency or abuse. However, their performance as stand-alone tools is uncertain, and further evaluation of questionnaires for prenatal alcohol use is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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17. Temperance, alcohol, and the American evangelical: a reassessment.
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Warner, Jessica
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TEMPERANCE , *ALCOHOLISM , *EVANGELICALISM , *BELIEF & doubt , *PENTECOSTALS , *CHRISTIANITY , *METHODIST Church - Abstract
Abstinence from alcohol is a way of life for many American evangelicals, with rates of abstention running at over 70% among some Pentecostal denominations. This paper examines the religious beliefs that, historically, have supported teetotalism. The most notable of these is Christian perfection, a doctrine that originated in 18th-century England, that was then radicalized in America in the early 19th century. Abstinence from alcohol is highest among denominations that make Christian perfection the cornerstone of their teachings, and lowest among those that discount human agency. The paper also argues that 19th-century American evangelicals were by no means committed uniformly to temperance as a way of life, and that this was especially true of the various Methodist churches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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18. Japan: alcohol today.
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HIGUCHI, SUSUMU, MATSUSHITA, SACHIO, MAESATO, HITOSHI, and OSAKI, YONEATSU
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ALCOHOL drinking , *ALCOHOL , *ALCOHOLISM , *ALCOHOLIC beverages , *PEOPLE with alcoholism , *DRINKING & traffic accidents , *ALCOHOLS (Chemical class) , *ALCOHOLIC beverage advertising , *TRAFFIC accidents , *HEALTH - Abstract
Aims The purpose of this paper is to outline alcohol availability, alcohol consumption and related harm, alcohol control policy and prevention programmes in Japan, few of which have been discussed in either the Japanese or English literature. Methods Data were collected primarily from the following two sources: statistics and survey results issued by the national government, including surveys funded by the government; and papers published since 2000, identified by searching the MEDLINE and Igaku-Chuo-Zasshi databases. These data were assessed regarding their quality and summarized. Some data presented here were produced specifically for this review. Results Although per capita alcohol consumption has tended to decline for more than 10 years, it has remained at a high level. Diversification of the drinking population has progressed rapidly, specifically in women, among whom alcohol consumption has increased sharply. Cross-sectional data suggest that alcohol consumption is associated with serious health and social consequences. Existing longitudinal data suggest that alcohol-related problems, especially health problems, have increased steadily over the past several decades, with few exceptions, including alcohol-related fatal road traffic accidents. Alcohol policy and prevention programmes have not developed to a level that can control these problems adequately. Specifically, the high availability of alcoholic beverages, including the lack of restrictions on sales and advertising and decreasing prices, are noted. Conclusions This review provides basic information regarding alcohol availability and alcohol consumption and related harm that may facilitate the improvement of existing alcohol control measures in Japan and encourage the development of new alcohol control measures. This research revealed the scarcity of longitudinal data regarding alcohol consumption and its consequences, and the lack of several important variables, such as disability adjusted life years, for improving our understanding of the comprehensive status of alcohol in Japan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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19. Addiction sciences and its psychometrics: the measurement of alcohol-related problems.
- Author
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Midanik, Lorraine T., Greenfield, Thomas K., and Bond, Jason
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOMETRICS , *ALCOHOLISM , *DIAGNOSIS of alcoholism , *ALCOHOL drinking , *POLITICAL science , *ALCOHOL , *ADDICTIONS , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) , *TEST validity - Abstract
Aims The focus of this paper is on psychometric issues related to the measurement of alcohol problems. Methods Taking a broad perspective, this paper first examines several issues around the use of instruments to provide diagnostic categories in surveys, including dimensionality, severity and alcohol consumption. Secondly, a discussion of some of the political issues surrounding measurement of alcohol problems is presented, including some of the conflicts that arise when the psychometric properties of commonly used instruments are questioned. Finally, newer statistical techniques that can be applied to scale development in the alcohol field are examined, including non-linear multivariate analyses and confirmatory/hypothesis-based methods. Results and conclusions Continued scholarly discussion needs to be encouraged around these psychometric issues so that instrument development and maintenance in the addiction sciences becomes an ongoing academic pursuit as we strive to measure alcohol problems in the best way possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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20. Adherence to pharmacotherapy in patients with alcohol and opioid dependence.
- Author
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Weiss, Roger D.
- Subjects
- *
SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *OPIOID abuse , *ALCOHOLISM , *DRUG therapy , *DRUGS , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
An important factor that has thus far limited the effectiveness of pharmacotherapies for patients with alcohol and opioid dependence is poor adherence to medication regimens. This paper presents a review of issues related to medication adherence in patients with these substance use disorders.A literature review was conducted of English language publications relating to medication adherence among patients with alcohol or opioid dependence.The paper places the topic in the context of adherence difficulties among patients with a variety of chronic medical and psychiatric illnesses. Difficulties measuring adherence are discussed, and strategies to improve medication adherence are reviewed. These include specific interventions that prescribing clinicians can implement in their individual meetings with patients; the use of external reinforcers, such as positive and negative contingencies, and involvement of family members or significant others; and specific prescribing and dosing practices that may improve adherence.As the use of pharmacotherapy for substance-dependent patients increases, rigorous and innovative approaches to encourage medication adherence should be sought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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21. The Israel Society for the Prevention of Alcoholism.
- Author
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Weiss, Shoshana and Gefen, Lia
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- *
PREVENTION of alcoholism - Abstract
This paper describes the profile of the Israel Society for the Prevention of Alcoholism (ISPA), which is a nation-wide, public, non-profit association. It portrays various aspects of ISPA treatment and rehabilitation facilities-the residential treatment center, the rehabilitative hostel and the 'warm home' for homeless alcoholics. It depicts ISPA prevention activities, prevention materials and its usage of the media, and deals with ISPA involvement in policy issues. The paper also addresses the research reality of ISPA and its scientific journal, and refers to the society's structure and its future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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22. Back to the drawing board? A review of applications of the transtheoretical model to substance use.
- Author
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Sutton, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
SUBSTANCE abuse , *ALCOHOLISM , *DRUG abuse , *CHANGE (Psychology) - Abstract
The transtheoretical model (TTM) is still enormously popular with practitioners, clinicians and many researchers in the addictions field. However, in a recent years a number of commentators have criticized aspects of the model and the research based on it. This paper extends a recent critique of the TTM as applied to smoking cessation to include applications of the model to cessation or reduction of alcohol or drug use. The first section discusses measures of the central construct of stages of change and notes a number of serious problems. Staging algorithms are based on arbitrary time periods and some are logically flawed. In the case of multi-dimensional questionnaires (the URICA, the SOCRATES and the RCQ), the pattern of correlations among the subscales shows that they are not measuring discrete stages of change. The one study to date that has compared the two different methods found low concordance, which is probably due to incompatible stage definitions. In the second section of the paper, the evidence base for the TTM is reviewed. The review is organized by the four research designs that have been used to test predictions from stage models: cross-sectional comparisons of people in different stages; examination of stage sequences; longitudinal prediction of stage transitions; and experimental studies of matched and mismatched interventions. It concludes that current evidence for the model as applied to substance use is meagre and inconsistent. Researchers are urged to develop better stage models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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23. Challenges in the manipulation, assessment and interpretation of craving relevant variables.
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Tiffany, Stephen T., Carter, Brian L., and Singleton, Edward G.
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DRUG abuse , *ALCOHOLISM - Abstract
The nature of drug craving and its role in the addictive process is a contentious issue in the addiction sciences. There are numerous disputes regarding the definition, assessment, manipulation and interpretation of craving, and progress toward resolving the enigmas of craving confronts numerous conceptual and methodological challenges. Greater attention to certain fundamental principles of measurement and manipulation should generate immediate and substantial improvements in efforts to understand and control alcohol craving. This paper provides suggestions for enhancing the measurement of self-reported alcohol craving and improving the manipulation of alcohol craving under controlled laboratory conditions. With regard to measurement, single-item scales commonly employed in craving research tend to be handicapped by limited reliability and validity. Multi-item craving scales are more likely to provide the accuracy required to accurately discriminate between different levels of craving across individuals or across different settings. Conceptual and practical considerations for the selection of multi-item craving instruments are discussed. With regard to the manipulation of alcohol craving in the laboratory, recent meta-analyses suggest that alcohol craving effects in such research may be relatively weaker than craving effects found in similar research with other addicts. Therefore, laboratory-based investigations into the nature of alcohol craving should utilize procedures and assessments that are particularly sensitive to the detection of alcohol craving. This paper offers methodological recommendations for enhancing the magnitude of alcohol craving effects generated in laboratory research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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24. Casual attributions in the explanation of alcohol-related accidents.
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Pernanen, Kai
- Subjects
- *
CAUSATION (Philosophy) , *ACCIDENTS , *ALCOHOLISM - Abstract
This paper discusses issues related to the cognitive and communicational activity of ascribing a causal role to alcohol use in accidents. It is argued that in addition to the empirical relationships to be explained causal attribution is limited by two other types of empirical contingencies: the cognitive processing of information available for causal attribution, and the representation of this information in language (encoding and decoding as part of communication). Only the latter two types of restrictions in causal attribution are discussed, since its logical requirements are covered by well known methodological principles. On the linguistic and communicative side, limitations and biases in causal ascription are introduced by (1) the three central concepts ('alcohol', 'cause', 'accidents') due to properties inherent in language; (2) the (often implicit) selection of boundary conditions; (3) heuristic inference rules; and (4) the tendency towards thematic closure in describing and explaining phenomena. It is suggested that social, psychological and interactional causal processes have been overlooked in attributing causal links between alcohol use, hazardous behaviour and accidents. This paper discusses issues related to the cognitive and communicational activity of ascribing a causal role to alcohol use in accidents. It is argued that in addition to the empirical relationships to be explained causal attribution is limited by two other types of empirical contingencies: the cognitive processing of information available for causal attribution, and the representation of this information in language (encoding and decoding as part of communication). Only the latter two types of restrictions in causal attribution are discussed, since its logical requirements are covered by well known methodological principles. On the linguistic and communicative side, limitations and biases in causal ascription are introduced by (1) the three central concepts ('alcohol', 'cause',... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
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25. Personal willingness to pay for prevention: evaluating the consequences of accidents as a basis for preventive measures.
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Jones-Lee, M.W.
- Subjects
- *
ACCIDENT prevention , *ALCOHOLISM , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper argues that if scarce resources are to be allocated efficiently and to greatest advantage then it is necessary to have explicit monetary measures of the benefits of reduced accident rares so that these benefits can be weighed against costs in the process of determining the appropriate amount to expend on alcohol-related accident prevention programmes. The conceptual issues related to the definition and estimation of monetary values of safely are discussed and the case in favour of basing such values on individual willingness to pay for safety is developed. The paper then summarises existing empirical estimates of willingness-to-pay based values for the prevention of fatalities and reports the preliminary results of recent work aimed at estimating willingness-to-pay based values for the prevention of non-fatal injuries. The paper concludes by examining the applicability of existing empirical estimates of the value of safety in the alcohol-related accident context and the transferability of estimates derived in developed countries to the developing country context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
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26. The origin of alcohol-related social norms in the Saami minority.
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Larsen, Svein
- Subjects
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ALCOHOLISM , *SAMI (European people) - Abstract
The present paper addressed the problem of the origin of alcohol-related social norms in the Saami minority in northern Norway. Based on data from studies of comparable ethnic minorities in Greenland, North America and Australia it could be expected that alcohol use- and abuse would be more prevalent in the Saami than in the Norwegian populations of northern Norway. No data to support this hypothesis exist. On the contrary, available data suggest that drinking problems in this group are similar to those of the majority in the area. The present paper developed the hypothesis that Saami alcohol-related social norms originated in the Laestadian religious revival. The paper investigated the impact of the Laestadian culture in the formation of alcohol-related social norms. It was concluded that the Laestadian sobriety norm, and the norm of abstinence from the use of adiafora, have influenced alcohol-related behaviour in the Saami group in such a way that this group does not conform to the drinking behaviour found in comparable minorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
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27. Changes in access to and availability of alcohol in the United States: research and policy implications.
- Author
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Holder, Harold D.
- Subjects
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ALCOHOLISM , *ALCOHOLIC beverages - Abstract
Recent changes in alcohol availability and access in the United States are reviewed and the role public policy research played in such changes are discussed. The paper finds that there are two concurrent trends, i.e. increased alcohol availability through changes in wine and spirits structural availability, lower prices and increased outlet densities, and decreased availability and access through higher minimum drinking ages, server intervention and training, server liability, low- and no-alcohol beverages, and warning labels on alcohol containers. This paper discusses these trends and the implications for policy development to which research is an input. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
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28. The National Treatment Outcomes Research Study (NTORS) and its influence on addiction treatment policy in the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Gossop, Michael
- Subjects
- *
DRUG abuse treatment , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DRUGS & crime , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *METHADONE treatment programs , *HEALTH policy , *ALCOHOLISM , *CRIME , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *TREATMENT programs , *DRUG abusers , *RESIDENTIAL care , *DISEASE complications , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper describes the political origins of the National Treatment Outcomes Research Study (NTORS) and the outputs and impacts of the study. NTORS was designed to meet the request of the Health Secretary and of a Government Task Force for evidence about the effectiveness of the national addiction treatment services. NTORS was a prospective cohort study which investigated outcomes over a 5-year period of drug users admitted to four major treatment modalities: in-patient treatment, residential rehabilitation, methadone reduction and methadone maintenance programmes. The study investigated treatments delivered under day-to-day operating conditions. Outcomes showed substantial reductions in illicit drug use and reduced injecting risk behaviours. These changes were accompanied by improved psychological and physical health and by reductions in criminal behaviour. However, not all outcomes were so positive. There was a continuing mortality rate in the cohort of about 1% per year, and many clients continued to drink heavily throughout the 5-year follow-up. NTORS findings informed and influenced UK addiction treatment policy both at the time and subsequently. The findings were influential in supporting an immediate increase in funding for treatment, and Government Ministers have repeatedly cited NTORS as evidence of the effectiveness of addiction treatment. One finding that received political attention was that of the cost savings provided by treatment through reductions in crime. This important finding led to an unanticipated consequence of NTORS; namely, the greater focus on crime reduction that has increasingly been promoted as a political and social priority for drug misuse treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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29. Griffith Edwards' work on the life course of alcohol dependence.
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Marshall, E. Jane
- Subjects
- *
TWENTIETH century , *DIAGNOSIS of alcoholism , *PSYCHOLOGY of alcoholism , *ALCOHOLISM , *PSYCHIATRY , *LEADERS , *RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
In 1976 Edwards & Gross proposed the concept of the alcohol dependence syndrome, based on the clinical observation that heavy drinkers manifested an inter-related clustering of signs and symptoms. That this modest 'provisional description' turned out to be so significant and influential is perhaps unsurprising when the context in which it was made is appreciated. Griffith Edwards and his colleagues at the Maudsley Hospital had undergone a rigorous 3-year training in clinical psychiatry, during which they had been taught to think critically and were grounded in the art of clinical observation. As he assessed patients for various alcohol research studies he realized that there was a clustering of certain elements. Thus clinical observation and an appreciation of the patient's drinking history contributed to the genesis of the concept. This paper reflects on the integration of his rigorous training at the Maudsley, his enquiring mind and encyclopaedic knowledge of the historical and research literature which enabled him to formulate a testable hypothesis about the alcohol dependence syndrome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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30. Global statistics on addictive behaviours: 2014 status report.
- Author
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Gowing, Linda R., Ali, Robert L., Allsop, Steve, Marsden, John, Turf, Elizabeth E., West, Robert, and Witton, John
- Subjects
- *
ADDICTIONS , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *ALCOHOLISM , *CANNABIS (Genus) , *GAMBLING , *PSYCHIATRIC drugs , *TOBACCO , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *COMPULSIVE behavior , *RESEARCH funding , *WORLD Wide Web , *WORLD health , *INFORMATION resources , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background and aims Addictive behaviours are among the greatest scourges on humankind. It is important to estimate the extent of the problem globally and in different geographical regions. Such estimates are available, but there is a need to collate and evaluate these to arrive at the best available synthetic figures. Addiction has commissioned this paper as the first of a series attempting to do this. Methods Online sources of global, regional and national information on prevalence and major harms relating to alcohol use, tobacco use, unsanctioned psychoactive drug use and gambling were identified through expert review and assessed. The primary data sources located were the websites of the World Health Organization (WHO), the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and the Alberta Gambling Research Institute. Summary statistics were compared with recent publications on the global epidemiology of addictive behaviours. Results An estimated 4.9% of the world's adult population (240 million people) suffer from alcohol use disorder (7.8% of men and 1.5% of women), with alcohol causing an estimated 257 disability-adjusted life years lost per 100 000 population. An estimated 22.5% of adults in the world (1 billion people) smoke tobacco products (32.0% of men and 7.0% of women). It is estimated that 11% of deaths in males and 6% of deaths in females each year are due to tobacco. Of 'unsanctioned psychoactive drugs', cannabis is the most prevalent at 3.5% globally, with each of the others at < 1%; 0.3% of the world's adult population (15 million people) inject drugs. Use of unsanctioned psychoactive drugs accounts for an estimated 83 disability-adjusted life years lost per 100 000 population. Global estimates of problem gambling are not possible, but in countries where it has been assessed the prevalence is estimated at 1.5%. Conclusions Tobacco and alcohol use are by far the most prevalent addictive behaviours and cause the large majority of the harm. However, the quality of data on prevalence and addiction-related harms is mostly low, and comparisons between countries and regions must be viewed with caution. There is an urgent need to review the quality of data on which global estimates are made and coordinate efforts to arrive at a more consistent approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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31. The influence of industry actions on the availability of alcoholic beverages in the African region.
- Author
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Babor, Thomas F., Robaina, Katherine, and Jernigan, David
- Subjects
- *
ALCOHOLIC beverages , *ALCOHOLISM , *ALCOHOL drinking , *ECONOMICS , *INDUSTRIES , *LOBBYING , *MARKETING , *PACKAGING , *PUBLIC health , *SOCIAL responsibility - Abstract
Aims The alcohol beverage industry has been expanding its corporate social responsibility and other business activities in sub-Saharan Africa. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the effects of these activities on the physical, economic, psychological and social availability of alcohol in the region. Methods Narrative review. Source materials came from the business press, industry sources (websites, annual reports, press releases, conference proceedings) and the scientific literature published since 2000. Results The alcohol industry has intensified its activities in the African region, through their funding of social aspect organizations, technical publications, policy workshops and other corporate social responsibility activities. Marketing campaigns, new product designs and the development of industry-civil society partnerships have increased. There is evidence that the alcohol industry also engages in lobbying, information dissemination and legal action to thwart effective public health measures. Conclusions The corporate social responsibility activities of the global alcohol industry have provided a vehicle to promote industry-favorable policies and increase the physical, economic, social and psychological availability of alcohol. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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32. Alcohol industry sponsorship and hazardous drinking in UK university students who play sport.
- Author
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O'Brien, Kerry S., Ferris, Jason, Greenlees, Ian, Jowett, Sophia, Rhind, Daniel, Cook, Penny A., and Kypri, Kypros
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGY of alcoholism , *ALCOHOLISM , *ATHLETES , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MARKETING , *SPORTS , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio - Abstract
Aim To examine whether receipt of alcohol industry sponsorship is associated with problematic drinking in UK university students who play sport. Methods University students ( n = 2450) participating in sports were invited to complete a pen-and-paper questionnaire by research staff approaching them at sporting facilities and in university settings. Respondents were asked whether they, personally, their team and/or their club were currently in receipt of sponsorship (e.g. money, free or subsidized travel or sporting products) from an alcohol-related industry (e.g. bars, liquor stores, wholesalers), and whether they had solicited the sponsorship. Drinking was assessed using the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test ( AUDIT). Results Questionnaires were completed by 2048 of those approached (response rate = 83%). Alcohol industry sponsorship was reported by 36% of the sample. After accounting for confounders (age, gender, disposable income and location) in multivariable models, receipt of alcohol sponsorship by a team (adjusted βadj = 0.41, P = 0.013), club (βadj = 0.73, P = 0.017), team and club (βadj = 0.79, P = 0.002) and combinations of individual and team or club sponsorships (βadj = 1.27, P < 0.002) were each associated with significantly higher AUDIT-consumption substance scores. Receipt of sponsorship by team and club [adjusted odds ratio ( aOR) = 2.04; 95% confidence interval ( CI) = 1.04-3.99] and combinations of individual and team or club sponsorships ( aOR = 4.12; 95% CI = 1.29-13.15) were each associated with increased odds of being classified a hazardous drinker ( AUDIT score >8). Respondents who sought out sponsorship were not at greater risk than respondents, or whose teams or clubs, had been approached by the alcohol industry. Conclusions University students in the United Kingdom who play sport and who personally receive alcohol industry sponsorship or whose club or team receives alcohol industry sponsorship appear to have more problematic drinking behaviour than UK university students who play sport and receive no alcohol industry sponsorship. Policy to reduce or cease such sponsorship should be considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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33. Should brief interventions in primary care address alcohol problems more strongly?
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McCambridge, Jim and Rollnick, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH promotion , *ALCOHOLISM , *ALCOHOL drinking , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *PRIMARY health care , *MOTIVATIONAL interviewing - Abstract
Background Brief interventions have well-established small effects on alcohol consumption among hazardous and harmful drinkers in primary care, and national large-scale programmes are being implemented in many countries for public health reasons. Methods This paper examines data from reviews and draws upon older brief intervention studies and recent developments in the literature on motivational interviewing to consider the capacity of brief interventions to benefit those with problems, including those with severe problems. Results Effects on alcohol problems have been shown much less consistently, and evidence cannot be claimed to be strong for any outcomes other than reduced consumption. Combinations of advice and motivational interviewing are a promising target for evaluation in trials, and more detailed studies of the conduct of brief interventions are needed. Conclusions We propose that brief interventions in primary care may be more effective if they offer appropriate content in a person-centred manner, addressing patient concerns more directly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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34. Bridging the gap between science and public health: taking advantage of tobacco control experience in Brazil to inform policies to counter risk factors for non-communicable diseases.
- Author
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Costa e Silva, Vera Luiza, Pantani, Daniela, Andreis, Mônica, Sparks, Robert, and Pinsky, Ilana
- Subjects
- *
PREVENTIVE medicine , *TOBACCO laws , *ALCOHOLISM , *HEALTH promotion , *HEALTH policy , *POLICY sciences , *SCIENCE , *TOBACCO , *GOVERNMENT policy , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *CONSUMER activism - Abstract
Aims and design The historical and economic involvement of Brazil with tobacco, as a major producer and exporter, was considered an insurmountable obstacle to controlling the consumption of this product. Nevertheless, the country was able to achieve significant progress in implementing public policies and to take an international leadership position, meeting its constitutional commitment to protect public health. In this paper we provide a brief historical overview of tobacco control ( TC) in Brazil, and analyse the factors that contributed to the major decline in tobacco consumption in the country over the last 20 years, as well as identify the challenges that had to be overcome and those still at play. Findings The Brazilian case demonstrates how cross-sectorial collaborations among health-related groups that capitalize on their respective strengths and capacities can help to influence public policy and overcome industry and population resistance to change. Although Brazil still lags behind some leading TC nations, the country has an extensive collaborative TC network that was built over time and continues to focus upon this issue. Conclusions The tobacco experience can serve as an example for other fields, such as alcoholic beverages, of how networks can be formed to influence the legislative process and the development of public policies. Brazilian statistics show that problems related to non-communicable diseases are a pressing public health issue, and advocacy groups, policy-makers and government departments can benefit from tobacco control history to fashion their own strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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35. The use of epidemiology in alcohol research.
- Author
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Rossow, Ingeborg and Norström, Thor
- Subjects
- *
ALCOHOLISM , *ATTRIBUTION (Social psychology) , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *RESEARCH methodology , *PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Aims This paper presents examples to illustrate the utility and limitations in the use of epidemiology in alcohol research and discusses some promising new directions. Methods Review of literature, concentrating on epidemiological alcohol research with relevance to public health. Findings and conclusion Epidemiology offers tools for assessment of causes and effects of alcohol consumption as well as the effects of efforts to prevent alcohol consumption and its consequences. Epidemiological studies have made significant contributions to alcohol research with respect to public health and public policy. Fixed-effects modelling, difference-in-differences estimation and integrated qualitative and epidemiological methods are promising but underused methods in epidemiological studies. Many epidemiological studies have limited transferability of knowledge to other cultures and jurisdictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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36. Alcohol's involvement in recurrent child abuse and neglect cases.
- Author
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Laslett, Anne‐Marie, Room, Robin, Dietze, Paul, and Ferris, Jason
- Subjects
- *
CHILD abuse , *ALCOHOLISM , *CHI-squared test , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *FAMILIES , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *POISSON distribution , *RECIDIVISTS , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL services , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DATA analysis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
ABSTRACT Aims This paper examined whether or not: (a) care-giver 'alcohol abuse' is associated with recurrent child maltreatment; (b) other 'risk factors' affect this relationship; and (c) which of alcohol abuse or other drug abuse plays a stronger role. It also examined (d) how children and families where alcohol-related child abuse was identified were managed by child protection services (CPS) in Victoria, Australia. Design, setting and participants Using anonymized data from Victorian CPS, repeat cases were examined involving 29 455 children identified between 2001 and 2005. Measurements Carer alcohol abuse, other drug abuse, mental ill-health, carer experience of abuse as a child, child age and gender, family type, socio-economic variables and level of child protection service intervention as recorded in the CPS electronic database were examined as risk factors for recurrence, using bivariate and multivariate techniques. Findings Almost one-quarter of children in CPS experienced a recurrent incident of child maltreatment in a 5-year period. Where carer alcohol abuse was identified children were significantly more likely to experience multiple incidents compared with children where this was not identified ( P < 0.001), as were children where other family risk factors (including markers of socio-economic disadvantage) were identified. The majority of children whose carers were identified with alcohol abuse experienced either repeat incidents or interventions (84%), although almost three-quarters of these children were managed without resort to the most serious outcome, involving court orders. Conclusions Alcohol and drug abuse in carers are important risk-factors for recurrent child maltreatment after accounting for other known risk factors; the increased risk appears to be similar between alcohol and drug abuse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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37. Thomas Trotter's 'Essay on Drunkenness' appraised.
- Author
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Edwards, Griffith
- Subjects
- *
COMPLICATIONS of alcoholism , *ALCOHOLISM , *ALCOHOLISM treatment , *BOOKS , *MANUSCRIPTS , *PHYSICIANS , *HISTORY - Abstract
ABSTRACT Background In 1804 Thomas Trotter, a recently retired Physician to the Fleet, published his 'Essay on Drunkenness'. This was the first ever book-length consideration of the phenomenon of alcohol dependence and its treatment. Aims The aim of this paper is to explore the impact of that treatise on the evolution of relevant ideas over the years that have followed. Methods A factual analysis of the content of the Essay is the starting-point, followed by an examination of sequential published appraisals on the significance, or lack of significance, of this work. Findings and Conclusions To the modern reader, Trotter is likely to be seen as prescient, with his assertion that 'the habit of drunkenness is a disease of the mind', setting the scene for two centuries of debate. The literature, however, seems to suggest that Trotter did not, in fact, achieve much impact either on professional opinion or on the emergent temperance movement. It was Benjamin Rush's 1785 pamphlet on 'Ardent Spirits' which achieved iconic status. Rush and Trotter, although in some ways overlapping in their ideas, differed in other respects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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38. Addiction Research Centres and the Nurturing of Creativity; The Research Institute on Addictions, University at Buffalo.
- Author
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Connors, Gerard J. and Walitzer, Kimberly S.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of associations, institutions, etc. , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *RESEARCH , *ALCOHOLISM , *DRUG addiction , *WORKING hours , *SCIENTISTS , *ADULT education workshops , *SOCIETIES - Abstract
ABSTRACT The Research Institute on Addictions (RIA) was established in 1970 as a research component of the New York State Department of Mental Hygiene. After three decades of serving as a research component of New York State agencies concerned with alcohol and substance abuse, RIA was legislatively transferred to the University at Buffalo in 1999. Today, RIA's cadre of senior research scientists are engaged individually and collaboratively on a multitude of addictions-related studies. The majority of the Institute's ongoing research studies relate to one or more of the following seven broad research domains: causes and consequences of alcohol, marijuana and other drug use; biological and neuroscience; gambling behavior; gender-related studies; dissemination and professional training; treatment; and youth, families and relationships. In this paper, an overview of the structure of the Institute is provided, along with a description of the organizational and scientific culture at RIA. Further information about the Institute, its scientists and its activities can be found at . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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39. Why don't northern American solutions to drinking and driving work in southern America?
- Author
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Pechansky, Flavio and Chandran, Aruna
- Subjects
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TRAFFIC safety , *AUTOMOBILE driving laws , *ALCOHOLISM , *BREATH tests , *ETHANOL - Abstract
ABSTRACT While individual studies from several South American countries have shown driving while intoxicated to be a problem, there are no objective systematically collected alcohol-associated driving data obtained in most South American countries. This limits their ability to implement and enforce targeted prevention strategies, evaluate whether proven prevention efforts from North America (particularly the United States and Canada) can be transferred to the South, and to sustain momentum for the improvement of road safety by demonstrating that previously implemented legal and policy changes are effective. The aim of this paper is to discuss the abysmal differences that exist between northern and southern American countries regarding the current status of driving while intoxicated prevention strategies-their implementation, impacts and effects-using Brazil as a case example. We propose a three-pronged approach to close this northern-southern American gap in driving while intoxicated prevention and intervention: (a) systematic collection on road traffic crash/injury/death as well as risk factor data, (b) passage of laws without loopholes requiring compliance with blood alcohol concentration testing and (c) provision of appropriate training and equipment to the police in concomitance with vigilant enforcement. Resources and energies must be put towards data collection, implementation of prevention strategies and enforcement in order to decrease the unacceptably high rates of these preventable driving while intoxicated deaths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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40. Is alcohol dependence best viewed as a chronic relapsing disorder?
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Cunningham, John A. and McCambridge, Jim
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ALCOHOLISM treatment , *ALCOHOLISM , *CHRONIC diseases , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *MATHEMATICAL models , *MEDICAL care , *HEALTH policy , *MEDICAL research , *NEUROBIOLOGY , *PUBLIC health , *DISEASE relapse , *THEORY - Abstract
ABSTRACT This 'For Debate' paper starts by recognizing the growing trend towards considering alcohol dependence as a chronic relapsing disorder. We argue that the adoption of this model results from focusing on those in treatment for alcohol dependence rather than considering the larger number of people in the general population who meet criteria for alcohol dependence at some point in their lives. The majority of the general population who ever experience alcohol dependence do not behave as though they have a chronic relapsing disorder: they do not seek treatment, resolve their dependence themselves and do not relapse repeatedly. We suggest that caution is therefore needed in using the chronic relapsing disorder label. Our primary concerns are that this formulation privileges biological aspects of dependence to the detriment of psychological and social contributions, it inhibits much-needed developments in understanding alcohol dependence and leads to inefficient distributions of public health and clinical care resources for alcohol dependence. We invite debate on this issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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41. Alcohol consumption and non-communicable diseases: epidemiology and policy implications.
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Parry, Charles D., Patra, Jayadeep, and Rehm, Jürgen
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DIABETES risk factors , *DISEASE risk factors , *CIRRHOSIS of the liver , *LIVER diseases , *PANCREATITIS , *ALCOHOLIC liver diseases , *TUMOR risk factors , *ALCOHOLISM , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors , *DISEASES , *ALCOHOL drinking , *HEALTH policy , *RESEARCH funding , *RISK assessment , *SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
ABSTRACT Aims This paper summarizes the relationships between different patterns of alcohol consumption and various on non-communicable disease (NCD) outcomes and estimates the percentage of NCD burden that is attributable to alcohol. Methods A narrative review, based on published meta-analyses of alcohol consumption-disease relations, together with an examination of the Comparative Risk Assessment estimates applied to the latest available revision of Global Burden of Disease study. Results Alcohol is causally linked (to varying degrees) to eight different cancers, with the risk increasing with the volume consumed. Similarly, alcohol use is related detrimentally to many cardiovascular outcomes, including hypertension, haemorrhagic stroke and atrial fibrillation. For other cardiovascular outcomes the relationship is more complex. Alcohol is furthermore linked to various forms of liver disease (particularly with fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis) and pancreatitis. For diabetes the relationship is also complex. Conservatively, of the global NCD-related burden of deaths, net years of life lost (YLL) and net disability adjusted life years (DALYs), 3.4%, 5.0% and 2.4%, respectively, can be attributed to alcohol consumption, with the burden being particularly high for cancer and liver cirrhosis. This burden is especially pronounced in countries of the former Soviet Union. Conclusions There is a strong link between alcohol and non-communicable diseases, particularly cancer, cardiovascular disease, liver disease, pancreatitis and diabetes, and these findings support calls by the World Health Organization to implement evidence-based strategies to reduce harmful use of alcohol. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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42. Addiction Research Centres and the Nurturing of Creativity.
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Heilig, Markus, Warren, Kenneth R., Kunos, George, Silverman, Peter B., and Hewitt, Brenda G.
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PREVENTION of alcoholism , *MEDICAL research , *STRATEGIC planning , *GOVERNMENT programs , *ORGANIZATIONAL goals , *HISTORY - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to present a concise account of the history, mission, structure and some recent achievements of the US National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). Created by the US Congress 40 years ago, the NIAAA has evolved from an entity charged mainly with building a national system of alcoholism treatment services to one with responsibility for developing, nurturing and supporting the biomedical and behavioral science foundation necessary to reduce the significant domestic and global public health impact of alcohol use disorders. The NIAAA is unique in that it functions both as a funding agency, supporting research at universities and other external, or 'extramural' research institutions, and is also a research institution itself, where alcohol research is carried out in-house, or 'intramurally'. Of a $450.2 million 2009 Congressional Appropriation, approximately 90% was devoted toward the former and approximately 10% towards the latter objective. The current NIAAA Strategic Plan builds on a new organizing principle for long-range research planning, based on a life-span perspective that recognizes that human biology and behavior continue to change throughout life and changes occurring throughout the life-span affect individuals' drinking patterns as well as the decisions they may make to change their drinking habits or to seek help for alcohol use problems. Within this framework, major efforts are currently being devoted to educating practitioners on clinically useful, science-based assessment and treatment methods that exist today, and development of personalized new treatments for tomorrow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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43. Conversation with Deborah Dawson.
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PREVENTION of alcoholism , *PSYCHOLOGY of alcoholism , *ALCOHOLISM risk factors , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *ALCOHOLISM , *DRINKING behavior , *ALCOHOL drinking , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *MASS media , *MEDICAL research , *PARENTING , *RETIREMENT , *SURVEYS , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *COMORBIDITY , *GOVERNMENT policy , *FAMILY history (Medicine) - Abstract
An interview with alcohol epidemiologist Deborah Dawson is presented. When asked about the changes on the views of alcohol use, misuse and disorders, she cites the benefits of developing alternative paradigms. She notes that the perception about alcohol use disorder (AUD) as a unitary construct is the distinction between alcohol abuse and dependence. She hopes that her paper on alcohol treatment can increase the understanding on the benefits of treatment.
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- 2011
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44. Prevalence of comorbid disorders in problem and pathological gambling: systematic review and meta-analysis of population surveys.
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Lorains, Felicity K., Cowlishaw, Sean, and Thomas, Shane A.
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DISEASE prevalence , *COMORBIDITY , *ALCOHOLISM , *MENTAL depression , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *NICOTINE addiction , *ANXIETY disorders , *ANTISOCIAL personality disorders , *COMPULSIVE gamblers - Abstract
This paper reviews evidence pertaining to the prevalence of common comorbid disorders, including alcohol use disorder, depression, substance use disorders, nicotine dependence, anxiety disorders and antisocial personality disorder, in population-representative samples of problem and pathological gamblers. A systematic search was conducted for peer-reviewed and unpublished articles reported between 1 January 1998 and 20 September 2010. Only studies which examined the prevalence of comorbid conditions in problem and/or pathological gamblers from a general population sample using randomized sampling methods and standardized measurement tools were included. Meta-analysis techniques were then performed to synthesize the included studies and estimate the weighted mean effect size and heterogeneity across studies. Eleven eligible studies were identified from the literature. Results from across the studies indicated that problem and pathological gamblers had high rates of other comorbid disorders. The highest mean prevalence was for nicotine dependence (60.1%), followed by a substance use disorder (57.5%), any type of mood disorder (37.9%) and any type of anxiety disorder (37.4%). However, there was evidence of moderate heterogeneity across studies, suggesting that rate estimates do not necessarily converge around a single population figure, and that weighted means should be interpreted with caution. Problem and pathological gamblers experience high levels of other comorbid mental health disorders and screening for comorbid disorders upon entering treatment for gambling problems is recommended. Further research is required to explore the underlying causes of variability observed in the prevalence estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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45. What economics can contribute to the addiction sciences.
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Caulkins, Jonathan P. and Nicosia, Nancy
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ADDICTIONS , *ECONOMICS , *DRUG addiction , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *ALCOHOLISM , *PHARMACEUTICAL policy , *DRUG control , *TOBACCO use , *NICOTINE addiction - Abstract
Aims The addiction sciences are intrinsically multi-disciplinary, and economics is among the disciplines that offer useful perspectives on the complex behaviors surrounding substance abuse. This paper summarizes contributions economics has made in the past and could make in the future towards understanding how illegal markets operate, how prices affect use, how use generates various consequences, and how policy shapes all three. Methods Review of literature, concentrating on illegal drugs as insights concerning markets are particularly salient, although we also mention relevant studies from the alcohol and tobacco fields. Findings and Conclusions Economics offers tools and topical expertise that usefully complement other disciplines associated traditionally with the addiction sciences. Its value goes far beyond the ability to monetize non-monetary outcomes or to calculate a cost-benefit ratio. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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46. What are the policy lessons of National Alcohol Prohibition in the United States, 1920–1933?
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Hall, Wayne
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ALCOHOL drinking , *PROHIBITION of alcohol , *ALCOHOLISM , *ALCOHOL control laws , *LIQUOR laws , *ALCOHOLIC beverage advertising , *MARIJUANA laws , *GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
National alcohol prohibition in the United States between 1920 and 1933 is believed widely to have been a misguided and failed social experiment that made alcohol problems worse by encouraging drinkers to switch to spirits and created a large black market for alcohol supplied by organized crime. The standard view of alcohol prohibition provides policy lessons that are invoked routinely in policy debates about alcohol and other drugs. The alcohol industry invokes it routinely when resisting proposals to reduce the availability of alcohol, increase its price or regulate alcohol advertising and promotion. Advocates of cannabis law reform invoke it frequently in support of their cause. This paper aims: (i) to provide an account of alcohol prohibition that is more accurate than the standard account because it is informed by historical and econometric analyses; (ii) to describe the policy debates in the 1920s and 1930s about the effectiveness of national prohibition; and (iii) to reflect on any relevance that the US experience with alcohol prohibition has for contemporary policies towards alcohol. It is incorrect to claim that the US experience of National Prohibition indicates that prohibition as a means of regulating alcohol is always doomed to failure. Subsequent experience shows that partial prohibitions can produce substantial public health benefits at an acceptable social cost, in the absence of substantial enforcement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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47. The trouble with drink: why ideas matter.
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Edwards, Griffith
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ALCOHOL , *ALCOHOL drinking , *ALCOHOLIC intoxication , *REDUCTIONISM , *SOCIAL conflict , *HEALTH , *ALCOHOLISM , *NATIONAL health services , *PRESSURE groups - Abstract
This paper builds upon the work of previous authors who have explored the evolution of ideas in the alcohol arena. With revisions in the relevant sections of ICD and DSM forthcoming, such matters are of considerable contemporary importance. The focus here will be upon the history of the last 200 years. The main themes to be explored include the flux of ideas on what, over time, has counted as the trouble with drink, ideas on the cause of the problem and the impact of this thinking on public action. Medical authorities of the late Enlightenment period made the revolutionary suggestion that habitual drunkenness constituted a disease, rather than a vice. The thread of that idea can be traced to the present day, but with an alternative perception of drink itself or alcohol-related problems generally, as cause for concern, also having a lineage. There are several inferences to be drawn from this history: the need for vigilance lest disease formulations become stalking-horses for moralism and social control, the need to integrate awareness of alcohol dependence as a dimensional individual-level problem, with a public health understanding of the vastly amorphous and at least equally important universe of alcohol-related problems; the dangers lurking in scientific reductionism when the problems at issue truly require a multi-disciplinary analysis; and the need for global consensus rather than cultural imposition of ideas on what counts as the problem with drink. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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48. Prevention programs in the 21st century: what we do not discuss in public.
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Holder, Harold
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PUBLIC health , *PREVENTIVE medicine , *HEALTH risk assessment , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *TOBACCO use , *ALCOHOLISM , *SMOKABLE plants , *NICOTIANA , *GENERALIZABILITY theory - Abstract
Prevention research concerning alcohol, tobacco and other drugs faces a number of challenges as the scientific foundation is strengthened for the future. Seven issues which the prevention research field should address are discussed: lack of transparency in analyses of prevention program outcomes, lack of disclosure of copyright and potential for profit/income during publication, post-hoc outcome variable selection and reporting only outcomes which show positive and statistical significance at any follow-up point, tendency to evaluate statistical significance only rather than practical significance as well, problem of selection bias in terms of selecting subjects and limited generalizability, the need for confirmation of outcomes in which only self-report data are used and selection of appropriate statistical distributions in conducting significance testing. In order to establish a solid scientific base for alcohol, tobacco and drug prevention, this paper calls for discussions, disclosures and debates about the above issues (and others) as essential. In summary, the best approach is always transparency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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49. Vested Interests in Addiction Research and Policy Poisonous partnerships: health sector buy-in to arrangements with government and addictive consumption industries.
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Adams, Peter J., Buetow, Stephen, and Rossen, Fiona
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PUBLIC health , *HUMAN services , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *PERSONALITY disorders , *HEALTH risk assessment , *PREVENTIVE medicine , *TOBACCO use , *ALCOHOLISM - Abstract
Aim This paper critically appraises relationship arrangements among three broadly conceived sectors: the government sector, the health sector (including researchers) and addictive consumption industries (particularly tobacco, alcohol and gambling). Method Three models for involvement are examined. In the ‘tripartite partnership model’ health sector agencies engage as co-equals with the government and industry sectors in order to implement public health initiatives such as host responsibility and public education. In the ‘non- association model’ the health sector engages with government agencies but not with the industry sector. In the ‘managed association model’ the health sector engages for specific purposes with the industry sector but contact is monitored and managed by government agencies. Findings Government and industry sectors commonly favour tripartite partnership arrangements. Health sector agencies that opt to engage in these partnership arrangements can encounter conflicts of interest and find their voice subsumed by dominant influences. Furthermore, their partnership compliance generates divisions within the health sector, with partnership dissenters often silenced and excluded from policy processes and funding. The non-association model is the least hazardous to the health sector because it protects against compromise and dominance. The managed association model is an option only when the government sector as a whole is committed strongly and clearly to the public health objectives. Conclusion In contexts where key parts of the government sector are conflicted over their public health responsibilities, health sector engagement in partnership arrangements entails too many risks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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50. Policy options for alcohol price regulation: the importance of modelling population heterogeneity.
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Meier, Petra Sylvia, Purshouse, Robin, and Brennan, Alan
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ALCOHOLIC beverages , *ALCOHOLISM , *TAXATION , *PRICE inflation , *PRICING , *ALCOHOL drinking , *PURCHASING , *CONSUMPTION (Economics) , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Context and aims Internationally, the repertoire of alcohol pricing policies has expanded to include targeted taxation, inflation-linked taxation, taxation based on alcohol-by-volume (ABV), minimum pricing policies (general or targeted), bans of below-cost selling and restricting price-based promotions. Policy makers clearly need to consider how options compare in reducing harms at the population level, but are also required to demonstrate proportionality of their actions, which necessitates a detailed understanding of policy effects on different population subgroups. This paper presents selected findings from a policy appraisal for the UK government and discusses the importance of accounting for population heterogeneity in such analyses. Method We have built a causal, deterministic, epidemiological model which takes account of differential preferences by population subgroups defined by age, gender and level of drinking (moderate, hazardous, harmful). We consider purchasing preferences in terms of the types and volumes of alcoholic beverages, prices paid and the balance between bars, clubs and restaurants as opposed to supermarkets and off-licenses. Results Age, sex and level of drinking fundamentally affect beverage preferences, drinking location, prices paid, price sensitivity and tendency to substitute for other beverage types. Pricing policies vary in their impact on different product types, price points and venues, thus having distinctly different effects on subgroups. Because population subgroups also have substantially different risk profiles for harms, policies are differentially effective in reducing health, crime, work-place absence and unemployment harms. Conclusion Policy appraisals must account for population heterogeneity and complexity if resulting interventions are to be well considered, proportionate, effective and cost-effective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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