1. Childhood problems of alcoholic women.
- Author
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Michels PJ, Johnson NP, Codd RT 3rd, and Mallin R
- Subjects
- Adult, Alcoholism etiology, Alcoholism psychology, Child, Data Collection, Demography, Family Relations, Female, Humans, Risk Factors, South Carolina epidemiology, Alcoholism epidemiology, Family Health
- Abstract
A sample of three hundred and nine alcoholic and non-alcoholic women in South Carolina were asked three family-of-origin questions that were thought to relate to the development of alcoholism. Specifically the women were asked: "While you were growing up did anyone in your family: (1) drink a lot? (2) use drugs? or (3) serve a jail sentence?" Results of multivariate odds ratio analyses indicate that alcoholic women were 7.31 times more likely to indicate a family member who drank a lot, 3.57 times more likely to report a family member who used drugs, and 5.6 times more likely to report a family member who served a jail sentence in their families of origin. The prediction of alcoholism by any of these family of origin variables did not differ as a function of age or race. These data suggest that policy makers may contribute to improved outcome measures by providing attention to children passing through these difficulties.
- Published
- 2000
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