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A shopper carries a six pack through a Tennessee liquor
store.File |
More than 30 percent of American adults have abused alcohol or suffered from
alcoholism at some point in their lives, and few have received treatment,
according to a new government study. Alcoholics who got treatment first received
it, on average, at about age 30 - eight years after they developed dependence on
drinking, researchers reported.
"That's a big lag," especially combined with the fact that only 24 percent of
alcoholics reported receiving no treatment at all, said study co-author Bridget
Grant of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
The treatment rate for alcoholics was slightly less than the rate found a
decade earlier. The study did not look at reasons for the decline, but other
research has revealed a belief among doctors and the public that treatment
doesn't work.
However, Dr Mark Willenbring, director of the institute's Division of
Treatment and Recovery Research, said evidence indicates that substance-abuse
treatment is more effective than treatments for many medical disorders.
Three common approaches to treating alcoholism are 12-step programs,
cognitive behavioral therapy and motivational enhancement therapy. Medications
such as Antabuse, naltrexone and Campral also can help in combination with
counseling, he said.
"The important thing is to engage with treatment and stick with it,"
Willenbring said.
About 42 percent of men and about 19 percent of women reported a history of
either alcohol abuse or alcoholism during their lives. Whites and Native
Americans were more likely than other ethnic groups to report drinking problems.
Alcohol abuse was defined as drinking-related failure to fulfill major
obligations at work, school or home; social or legal problems; and drinking in
hazardous situations. Alcoholism was characterized by compulsive drinking;
preoccupation with drinking; and tolerance to alcohol or withdrawal symptoms.
The definitions were based on the American Psychiatric Association's
diagnostic manual.
Treatment, in the study's definition, could have been by a doctor or another
health professional, in a 12-step program, at a crisis center or through an
employee-assistance program.
The study was based on a new analysis of the 2001-2002 National Epidemiologic
Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions. The survey involved more than 43,000
face-to-face interviews with a sample of Americans, ages 18 and older.
A previous report on the same data found that 4.7 percent of adults reported
alcohol abuse in 2001-2002, and 3.8 percent reported alcoholism.
The new analysis was the first to report on the prevalence of alcohol
problems over a lifetime.
The study was funded by the New York State Psychiatric Institute and the
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
Agencies
(China Daily 07/04/2007 page9)