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Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Description: Alcohol abuse and other substance use disorders are significant, underdiagnosed health problems for women and carry high costs for individuals and society. Compared with men, alcohol abuse by women has a disproportionate effect on their health and lives, including reproductive function and pregnancy outcomes. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism defines at-risk alcohol use for healthy women as more than three drinks per occasion ( Box 21.1 ), more than seven drinks per week, or any amount of drinking for women who are pregnant or at risk of pregnancy. Moderate drinking is defined as one drink per day, but 50% of binge drinking occurs among otherwise moderate drinkers.
One standard drink is equal to 15 mL of pure ethanol
Beer or wine cooler: 12 oz
Table wine: 5 oz (25-oz bottle = 5 drinks)
Malt liquor: 8–9 oz (12-oz can = 1.5 drink)
80-Proof spirits: 1.5 oz (a mixed drink may contain 1–3 or more drinks)
Prevalence: Alcohol use disorders are the most prevalent of all substance use disorders worldwide: American Indian and Alaska Native women (13.7%), White non-Hispanic women (5.6%), Black non-Hispanic women (3.5%), and Hispanic or Latino women (3.8%). Over 25% of individuals aged 18–24 years report binge drinking. Among women aged 18–34 years who binge drink, 31.4% report drinking eight or more drinks per occasion. Alcohol-related mortality is the third leading cause of preventable death for women in the United States.
Predominant Age: Not age specific, most common from teens to early 30s.
Genetics: Estimated 50% of the vulnerabilities related to alcohol use disorder are genetic.
Causes: Excessive and frequent use of alcohol.
Risk Factors: Male gender, age 18–29, Native American and White ethnicity, significant disability, other substance use disorder, mood disorder (eg, major depression, bipolar disorder), personality disorder (eg, borderline or antisocial personality). (Higher than average rates of alcohol use disorder also have been reported among transgender populations.)
History of >3 drinks per occasion, >7 drinks per week, or drinking any amount during pregnancy
Alcohol withdrawal (tremor, agitation, clouding of the sensorium)
Anxiety, depression, suicidality
Bone marrow suppression
Cardiac symptoms
Central or peripheral neurologic symptoms
Comorbid substance-use disorders
Electrolyte disturbance
Gastrointestinal symptoms, including reflux
Hypertension
Increased liver enzymes, including elevated γ-glutamyl transpeptidase
Macrocytosis
Malignancies of various organ systems (eg, oropharynx, gastrointestinal, breast)
Sleep disturbance
Social or legal problems
Trauma or injury
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