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A qualitative exploration into the experiences of the menstrual cycle in relation to alcohol use and research

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A qualitative exploration into the experiences of the menstrual cycle in relation to alcohol use and research. / Warren, J.G.; Fallon, V.M.; Goodwin, L. et al.
In: Journal of Substance Use, 31.03.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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APA

Warren, J. G., Fallon, V. M., Goodwin, L., Gage, S. H., & Rose, A. K. (2025). A qualitative exploration into the experiences of the menstrual cycle in relation to alcohol use and research. Journal of Substance Use. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/14659891.2025.2481072

Vancouver

Warren JG, Fallon VM, Goodwin L, Gage SH, Rose AK. A qualitative exploration into the experiences of the menstrual cycle in relation to alcohol use and research. Journal of Substance Use. 2025 Mar 31. Epub 2025 Mar 31. doi: 10.1080/14659891.2025.2481072

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Bibtex

@article{9aaf4186bf4546b6833da63718bbbe73,
title = "A qualitative exploration into the experiences of the menstrual cycle in relation to alcohol use and research",
abstract = "IntroductionDespite approximately half of the population experiencing menstrual cycles, little is known about experiences of fluctuations in mood and behavior relating to alcohol use. Literature has investigated whether the cycle affects alcohol use, but none have explored whether individuals are conscious of effects. It is also crucial to understand what people believe is important for researchers to investigate within this topic. The aim was to qualitatively investigate experiences of the menstrual cycle and how it may affect alcohol use. The second aim was to understand what methods researchers should consider.MethodsInductive thematic analysis was used to analyze 20 semi-structured interviews from individuals in the UK.ResultsResults showed alcohol themes: alcohol during menses (reduced consumption); motives for consumption (less social drinking during menses and drinking to cope with premenstrual symptoms); and conscious changes in alcohol use (individuals were unaware of fluctuations). For research themes: menstrual literacy (inadequate education); healthcare (inconsistencies in healthcare provision); and research topics (key areas suggested).ConclusionOverall, there are some conscious fluctuations in alcohol use, with regard to menses, and menstrual literacy was generally poor. Further research is needed for other samples (e.g., menopausal individuals and alcohol). Also, improvements in menstrual education are needed to improve menstrual literacy.",
author = "J.G. Warren and V.M. Fallon and L. Goodwin and S.H. Gage and A.K. Rose",
year = "2025",
month = mar,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1080/14659891.2025.2481072",
language = "English",
journal = "Journal of Substance Use",
issn = "1465-9891",
publisher = "Informa Healthcare",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A qualitative exploration into the experiences of the menstrual cycle in relation to alcohol use and research

AU - Warren, J.G.

AU - Fallon, V.M.

AU - Goodwin, L.

AU - Gage, S.H.

AU - Rose, A.K.

PY - 2025/3/31

Y1 - 2025/3/31

N2 - IntroductionDespite approximately half of the population experiencing menstrual cycles, little is known about experiences of fluctuations in mood and behavior relating to alcohol use. Literature has investigated whether the cycle affects alcohol use, but none have explored whether individuals are conscious of effects. It is also crucial to understand what people believe is important for researchers to investigate within this topic. The aim was to qualitatively investigate experiences of the menstrual cycle and how it may affect alcohol use. The second aim was to understand what methods researchers should consider.MethodsInductive thematic analysis was used to analyze 20 semi-structured interviews from individuals in the UK.ResultsResults showed alcohol themes: alcohol during menses (reduced consumption); motives for consumption (less social drinking during menses and drinking to cope with premenstrual symptoms); and conscious changes in alcohol use (individuals were unaware of fluctuations). For research themes: menstrual literacy (inadequate education); healthcare (inconsistencies in healthcare provision); and research topics (key areas suggested).ConclusionOverall, there are some conscious fluctuations in alcohol use, with regard to menses, and menstrual literacy was generally poor. Further research is needed for other samples (e.g., menopausal individuals and alcohol). Also, improvements in menstrual education are needed to improve menstrual literacy.

AB - IntroductionDespite approximately half of the population experiencing menstrual cycles, little is known about experiences of fluctuations in mood and behavior relating to alcohol use. Literature has investigated whether the cycle affects alcohol use, but none have explored whether individuals are conscious of effects. It is also crucial to understand what people believe is important for researchers to investigate within this topic. The aim was to qualitatively investigate experiences of the menstrual cycle and how it may affect alcohol use. The second aim was to understand what methods researchers should consider.MethodsInductive thematic analysis was used to analyze 20 semi-structured interviews from individuals in the UK.ResultsResults showed alcohol themes: alcohol during menses (reduced consumption); motives for consumption (less social drinking during menses and drinking to cope with premenstrual symptoms); and conscious changes in alcohol use (individuals were unaware of fluctuations). For research themes: menstrual literacy (inadequate education); healthcare (inconsistencies in healthcare provision); and research topics (key areas suggested).ConclusionOverall, there are some conscious fluctuations in alcohol use, with regard to menses, and menstrual literacy was generally poor. Further research is needed for other samples (e.g., menopausal individuals and alcohol). Also, improvements in menstrual education are needed to improve menstrual literacy.

U2 - 10.1080/14659891.2025.2481072

DO - 10.1080/14659891.2025.2481072

M3 - Journal article

JO - Journal of Substance Use

JF - Journal of Substance Use

SN - 1465-9891

ER -