risk factors for alcoholism
Last reviewed 01/2018
There is no single factor that accounts for the variation in individual risk of developing alcohol-use disorders. The evidence suggests that harmful alcohol use and alcohol dependence have a wide range of causal factors
- family history
- offspring of parents with alcohol dependence are four times more likely to develop alcohol dependence
- genetic studies (particularly those in twins) has clearly demonstrated a genetic component to the risk of alcohol dependence
- a meta-analysis of 9,897 twin pairs from Australian and US studies found the heritability of alcohol dependence to be in excess of 50%
- psychological factors
- psychiatric comorbidity
- particularly depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), psychosis and drug misuse
- stress, adverse life events and abuse
- sex:
- men are twice as likely to be problem drinkers
- occupation:
- publicans and brewers have an increased access to drink and are at a higher risk
- heavy drinking is seen as the norm in some jobs e.g. sailors
- homelessness:
- a third of homeless people have a drink problem
- race:
- British Afro-Caribbeans and Asians have a lower rate of drink problems
- 20% of Chinese and Japanese cannot drink alcohol because of an inherited deficiency of acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (1)
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