1. The structure of alcohol dependence in the community.
- Author
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Proudfoot H, Baillie AJ, and Teesson M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Alcoholism diagnosis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Data Collection, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, New South Wales, Psychometrics statistics & numerical data, Reproducibility of Results, Sex Factors, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Alcoholism epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Although dependence on alcohol appears to be a reliable unitary construct, abuse has not found a similar level of support as a separate construct. This paper describes a confirmatory factor analysis of the DSM-IV alcohol abuse and dependence criteria in a general population sample., Methods: Data from alcohol drinkers (n = 7746) were obtained from a cross-sectional study of a large, representative sample of the Australian general population. One- and two-factor solutions for the DSM-IV criteria for abuse and dependence (assessed by CIDI-Auto) were compared using confirmatory factor analysis., Results: Approximately 74% of Australians had used alcohol 12 or more times in the past year and 19% met at least one DSM-IV alcohol abuse or dependence criterion. Overall 6% met criteria for an alcohol use disorder (1.9% abuse, 4.1% dependence). More men than women met criteria for an alcohol use disorder and the prevalence of alcohol use disorders decreased with increasing age. Both one- and two-factor solutions from the confirmatory factor analyses provided an adequate fit to the data for the overall sample. The correlation between the abuse and dependence factors in the two-factor model was extremely high (0.95)., Conclusion: Alcohol abuse and dependence criteria were most parsimoniously described by a single continuous construct incorporating all eleven abuse and dependence criteria.
- Published
- 2006
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