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- Esser, Marissa B4
- Naimi, Timothy S4
- Sacks, Jeffrey J4
- Bouchery, Ellen E3
- Chaloupka, Frank J2
- Kanny, Dafna2
- Toomey, Traci L2
- Babor, Thomas F1
- Bohm, Michele K1
- Chattopadhyay, Sajal K1
- Chavez, Pollyanna R1
- Churchill, Victoria1
- Elder, Randy W1
- Fielding, Jonathan E1
- Gonzales, Katherine1
- Gonzales, Katherine R1
- Greenfield, Thomas K1
- Gruenewald, Paul J1
- Guy, Gery P Jr1
- Harwood, Henrick J1
- Hingson, Ralph W1
- Holder, Harold1
- Hungerford, Daniel W1
- Karriker-Jaffe, Katherine J1
Substance Use Disorders
This collection includes research on the myriad social, biological, environmental, and psychological factors that influence and are associated with substance use disorders. Special attention is given to addiction prevention and treatment services, harm reduction strategies, policy measures and access to care, and integration of the behavioral health workforce and general health care.
10 Results
- Research Article
Distribution of Drinks Consumed by U.S. Adults by Average Daily Alcohol Consumption: A Comparison of 2 Nationwide Surveys
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 59Issue 5p669–677Published online: August 1, 2020- Marissa B. Esser
- Jeffrey J. Sacks
- Adam Sherk
- Katherine J. Karriker-Jaffe
- Thomas K. Greenfield
- Carol Pierannunzi
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 9Estimates of alcohol consumption in the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System are generally lower than those in other surveys of U.S. adults. This study compares the estimates of adults’ drinking patterns and the distribution of drinks consumed by average daily alcohol consumption from 2 nationwide telephone surveys. - Research Article
Binge Drinking and Prescription Opioid Misuse in the U.S., 2012–2014
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 57Issue 2p197–208Published online: June 11, 2019- Marissa B. Esser
- Gery P. Guy Jr.
- Kun Zhang
- Robert D. Brewer
Cited in Scopus: 36Prescription opioids were responsible for approximately 17,000 deaths in the U.S. in 2016. One in five prescription opioid deaths also involve alcohol. Drinkers who misuse prescription opioids (i.e., use without a prescription or use only for the experience or feeling it causes) are at a heightened risk of overdose. However, little is known about the relationship between drinking patterns and prescription opioid misuse. - Research Article
Annual Total Binge Drinks Consumed by U.S. Adults, 2015
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 54Issue 4p486–496Published in issue: April, 2018- Dafna Kanny
- Timothy S. Naimi
- Yong Liu
- Hua Lu
- Robert D. Brewer
Cited in Scopus: 97Binge drinking (four or more drinks for women, five or more drinks for men on an occasion) accounts for more than half of the 88,000 U.S. deaths resulting from excessive drinking annually. Adult binge drinkers do so frequently and at high intensity; however, there are known disparities in binge drinking that are not well characterized by any single binge-drinking measure. A new measure of total annual binge drinks was used to assess these disparities at the state and national levels. - Review article
Alcohol Electronic Screening and Brief Intervention: A Community Guide Systematic Review
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 51Issue 5p801–811Published in issue: November, 2016- Kristin A. Tansil
- Marissa B. Esser
- Paramjit Sandhu
- Jeffrey A. Reynolds
- Randy W. Elder
- Rebecca S. Williamson
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 28Excessive drinking is responsible for one in ten deaths among working-age adults in the U.S. annually. Alcohol screening and brief intervention is an effective but underutilized intervention for reducing excessive drinking among adults. Electronic screening and brief intervention (e-SBI) uses electronic devices to deliver key elements of alcohol screening and brief intervention, with the potential to expand population reach. - Brief Report
2010 National and State Costs of Excessive Alcohol Consumption
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 49Issue 5e73–e79Published online: October 1, 2015- Jeffrey J. Sacks
- Katherine R. Gonzales
- Ellen E. Bouchery
- Laura E. Tomedi
- Robert D. Brewer
Cited in Scopus: 622Excessive alcohol use cost the U.S. $223.5 billion in 2006. Given economic shifts in the U.S. since 2006, more-current estimates are needed to help inform the planning of prevention strategies. - Review and Special Articles
State Costs of Excessive Alcohol Consumption, 2006
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 45Issue 4p474–485Published in issue: October, 2013- Jeffrey J. Sacks
- Jim Roeber
- Ellen E. Bouchery
- Katherine Gonzales
- Frank J. Chaloupka
- Robert D. Brewer
Cited in Scopus: 46Excessive alcohol consumption is responsible for an average of 80,000 deaths in the U.S. each year and cost $223.5 billion ($1.90/drink) in 2006. Comparable state estimates of this cost are needed to help inform prevention strategies. - Research Article
Efficacy and the Strength of Evidence of U.S. Alcohol Control Policies
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 45Issue 1p19–28Published in issue: July, 2013- Toben F. Nelson
- Ziming Xuan
- Thomas F. Babor
- Robert D. Brewer
- Frank J. Chaloupka
- Paul J. Gruenewald
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 87Public policy can limit alcohol consumption and its associated harm, but no direct comparison of the relative efficacy of alcohol control policies exists for the U.S. - Brief report
Binge Drinking Intensity: A Comparison of Two Measures
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 42Issue 6p625–629Published in issue: June, 2012- Marissa B. Esser
- Dafna Kanny
- Robert D. Brewer
- Timothy S. Naimi
Cited in Scopus: 22Binge drinking (≥4 drinks for women; ≥5 drinks for men, per occasion) is responsible for more than half of the estimated 80,000 U.S. deaths annually and three-quarters of the $223.5 billion in costs in 2006. Binge drinking prevalence is assessed more commonly than binge drinking intensity (i.e., number of drinks consumed per binge episode). Risk of binge drinking–related harm increases with intensity, and thus it is important to monitor. The largest number of drinks consumed is assessed in health surveys, but its usefulness for assessing binge intensity is unknown. - Review and special article
Economic Costs of Excessive Alcohol Consumption in the U.S., 2006
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 41Issue 5p516–524Published in issue: November, 2011- Ellen E. Bouchery
- Henrick J. Harwood
- Jeffrey J. Sacks
- Carol J. Simon
- Robert D. Brewer
Cited in Scopus: 634Excessive alcohol consumption causes premature death (average of 79,000 deaths annually); increased disease and injury; property damage from fire and motor vehicle crashes; alcohol-related crime; and lost productivity. However, its economic cost has not been assessed for the U.S. since 1998. - Brief report
Impact of a New Gender-Specific Definition for Binge Drinking on Prevalence Estimates for Women
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 40Issue 4p468–471Published in issue: April, 2011- Pollyanna R. Chavez
- David E. Nelson
- Timothy S. Naimi
- Robert D. Brewer
Cited in Scopus: 40Binge drinking accounts for more than half of the 79,000 deaths due to excessive drinking in the U.S. each year. In 2006, the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) lowered the threshold for defining binge drinking among women from ≥5 drinks to ≥4 drinks per occasion, in accordance with national recommendations.