Search results for "Heavy drinking"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Follow-Up Data Improve the Estimation of the Prevalence of Heavy Alcohol Consumption.

2018

Aims. We aim to adjust for potential non-participation bias in the prevalence of heavy alcohol consumption. Methods. Population survey data from Finnish health examination surveys conducted in 1987–2007 were linked to the administrative registers for mortality and morbidity follow-up until end of 2014. Utilising these data, available for both participants and non-participants, we model the association between heavy alcohol consumption and alcohol-related disease diagnoses. Results. Our results show that the estimated prevalence of heavy alcohol consumption is on average of 1.5 times higher for men and 1.8 times higher for women than what was obtained from participants only (complete case an…

AdultData AnalysisMaleAlcohol Drinking030508 substance abuseongelmakäyttöheavy drinking03 medical and health sciencesHealth examination0302 clinical medicineEnvironmental healthfollow-upPrevalenceMedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineRegistriesFinlandPopulation surveyAgedEstimationta112Heavy drinkingbusiness.industryFollow up studiesPercentage pointta3142General MedicineMiddle Agedalcohol drinkingHealth SurveysFemaleseurantatutkimusalkoholinkäyttö0305 other medical sciencebusinessAlcohol consumptionAlcohol-Related Disorderssurvey-tutkimusCase analysisFollow-Up StudiesAlcohol and alcoholism (Oxford, Oxfordshire)
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Functions of adolescent drinking in Finland and the Soviet Union

1987

The present study was conducted in Finland and the USSR (Estonia) with two birth cohorts (14 and 17 years old) and their parents. The subjects, 504 in Finland and 329 in Estonia, were drawn from urban and rural areas. 85% of the Estonian and 55% of the Finnish parents returned the questionnaire. The results supported the hypothesis that adolescent drinking is an age-related behaviour aimed at active coping efforts to adopt adult-like behaviour. In both countries abstinence decreased with age, and the use of alcohol was seen as behaviour which became acceptable at an older age than the age when the actual initiation occurred. However, the use of alcohol remained occasional through the ages o…

Coping (psychology)Heavy drinkingmedia_common.quotation_subjectLeisure timeAbstinenceEstonianlanguage.human_languageEducationDevelopmental psychologyDevelopmental and Educational PsychologylanguageRural areaSoviet unionPsychologyEarly onsetDemographymedia_commonEuropean Journal of Psychology of Education
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Preserved Crossmodal Integration of Emotional Signals in Binge Drinking

2017

Binge drinking is an alcohol consumption pattern with various psychological and cognitive consequences. As binge drinking showed qualitatively comparable cognitive impairments to those reported in alcohol-dependence, a continuum hypothesis suggests that this habit would be a first step toward alcohol-related disorders. Besides these cognitive impairments, alcohol-dependence is also characterized by large-scale deficits in emotional processing, particularly in crossmodal contexts, and these abilities have scarcely been explored in binge drinking. Emotional decoding, most often based on multiple modalities (e.g., facial expression, prosody or gesture), yet represents a crucial ability for eff…

media_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:BF1-990030508 substance abuseBinge drinkingemotionheavy drinking: Traitement & psychologie clinique [H13] [Sciences sociales & comportementales psychologie]Anger: Treatment & clinical psychology [H13] [Social & behavioral sciences psychology]Developmental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineprosodyPsychologyGeneral Psychologyfacial expressionOriginal Researchmedia_commonFacial expressionModalitiesCrossmodalAlcohol dependenceCognitionalcohol-dependencelcsh:PsychologyFacilitation0305 other medical sciencePsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFrontiers in Psychology
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