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Alcoholism

Drinking Can Kill You—Especially If You're a Woman!

Women may be more at risk for drinking consequences than men.

Most of us intuitively know that people who drink to excess—in particular those men and women whose drinking qualifies them for a diagnosis of alcoholism—suffer from severe consequences, including health consequences. This was confirmed yet again in a study conducted in Germany and reported in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, earlier this year (John, U., Rumpf et al 2013). The question that these researchers were seeking to answer was this: Exactly how much more likely is an alcoholic to die as compared to a non-alcoholic?

The Surprise in the Data

What the data showed surprised the researchers. They did, as expected, find that over a 14-year period, alcoholics had a higher death rate than non-alcoholics. Among men, the death rate was almost twice as high for the alcoholic group. But the big surprise came from the women in the sample: they were five times more likely to die than their non-alcoholic peers.

Understanding exactly why alcoholism is so much more lethal among women as compared to men will require further study. Hopefully these findings in and of themselves will spur such research moving forward. For now, these findings should amount to a red flag for women—and not only those who are alcoholics.

But What If I’m Not an Alcoholic?

This particular study focused on a group of men and women whose drinking was so severe that it qualified them for a forma; diagnosis of alcoholism. But does that mean that women’s whose drinking falls short of crossing that red line should feel safe? I don’t believe so. Here’s why.

For many years mental health and health professionals were used to thinking of drinking in a black-and-white way. Specifically, people were essentially thought to fall into one of two categories: alcoholics, and non-alcoholics. That kind of categorical thinking is represented by the following diagram:

For the past several years the American Psychiatric Association has worked on a revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual that is used to make diagnoses. In particular, the APA did a lot of re-thinking about this categorical view of many diagnoses, and one of them was alcoholism. As a result, in its just released newest version of the manual, called DSM-5, the categorical approach has been replaced with a dimensional one (DSM5.org). That view can be represented by a diagram such as the following:

In this new dimensional view drinking behavior does not fall simply into one of two categories, but exists on a spectrum that varies a great deal, from what could be called social drinking at one extreme, to the kind of alcoholism that was the subject of the above study. In between is a large range of drinking, including a gray area that could be called the almost alcoholic zone.

This new approach is not intended to diagnose more people. On the contrary, the proportion of men and women who fall at the extreme right side of the spectrum is probably no larger than it has ever been. However, this new dimensional perspective on the "drinking world" can also be helpful to those people who, though not alcoholics, might be inclined to believe that they are safe simply because of that fact. In reality, many people fall somewhere in the middle of the drinking spectrum. That means that they are not necessarily totally “safe,” even though their drinking falls far short of alcoholism.

The dimensional approach will be useful to everyone, but the data reported above may make it even more relevant for women. Consequences of drinking in the almost alcoholic zone are not as extreme as those associated with alcoholism, but they are real. They can include physical, emotional, and social consequences.

Quite a few women have shared with me that the contemporary work, family, and social lives they live are conducive to drinking more than they once did. Meeting friends for happy hour, having a couple of glasses of wine after work every day to unwind (or to get to sleep) are fairly common. That’s not to say that this equals alcoholism, or that these women all need treatment. On the other hand, they may be unwittingly exposing themselves to health risks. Rather than “pathologizing” them the new dimensional view of the drinking world could help many women evaluate their own drinking and make a decision if they like where they are, or ought to consider ways of “shifting left” on the drinking spectrum.

@2013 by Joseph Nowinski, Ph.D., co-author, Almost Alcoholic: Is My (or My Loved One's) Drinking a Problem?

Reference:

John, U., Rumpf, H.-J., Bischof, G., Hapke, U., Hanke, M. and Meyer, C. (2013), Excess Mortality of Alcohol-Dependent Individuals After 14 Years and Mortality Predictors Based on Treatment Participation and Severity of Alcohol Dependence. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 37: 156–163. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2012.01863.x

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