Title of article
Alcohol problems and all-cause mortality in men and women: Predictive capacity of a clinical screening tool in a 21-year follow-up of a large, UK-wide, general population-based survey
Author/Authors
Batty، نويسنده , , G. David and Hunt، نويسنده , , Kate and Emslie، نويسنده , , Carol and Lewars، نويسنده , , Heather and Gale، نويسنده , , Catharine R. Gale، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
5
From page
317
To page
321
Abstract
Objective
the relation between alcohol consumption and mortality has been well explored, little is known about the link between alcohol problems and mortality in general population-based studies, particularly among women. This was the objective of the present study
s
s prospective cohort study, 5333 non-abstaining individuals (2539 women) from the UK-wide Health and Lifestyle Survey (aged 42.9 years at study induction) completed the CAGE questionnaire of alcohol problems and participated in a medical examination in 1984/1985; they were then followed up for mortality experience until 2005.
s
l problems at baseline were less common in women (2.4%) than in men (7.8%). A total of 21 years of follow-up gave rise to 1201 deaths. Elevated rates of mortality were evident in persons reporting symptoms of alcohol problems in comparison to those who did not. In gender-stratified analyses, alcohol problems were more strongly associated with mortality risk in women (age-adjusted hazards ratio: 2.25; 95% confidence interval: 1.22–4.12) than in men (1.49; 1.12–1.99), although this effect modification was not statistically significant (P value for interaction=0.125). Controlling for a range of covariates—including socioeconomic position, co-morbidity (somatic and psychiatric), and alcohol intake—had essentially no impact on these associations.
sion
GE questionnaire may have some utility in routine health assessments in the general population.
Keywords
All-Cause Mortality , Predictive capacity , Alcohol Problems
Journal title
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Record number
1742814
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