Women and alcohol: use and abuse

National surveys of the quantity/frequency of drinking, conducted over the last half century, show that the percentage of nonabstaining women has remained at about 60%. Although male/female differences in drinking are smaller than they were a generation ago, this appears to relate primarily to drink...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The journal of nervous and mental disease Vol. 181; no. 4; p. 211
Main Author: Gomberg, E S
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States 01-04-1993
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Summary:National surveys of the quantity/frequency of drinking, conducted over the last half century, show that the percentage of nonabstaining women has remained at about 60%. Although male/female differences in drinking are smaller than they were a generation ago, this appears to relate primarily to drinking by young adults. Study of social attitudes toward male and female intoxication has consistently indicated more disapproval of female intoxication. Alcoholism in women has a complex etiology that includes biological factors, positive family history, difficulties in impulse control, depression, and drinking by significant others in the social environment. Male/female differences in patterns and consequences of alcoholic behavior are summarized, as are differences among alcoholic women with earlier or later onset.
ISSN:0022-3018
DOI:10.1097/00005053-199304000-00001