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Trajectories of alcohol misuse among the UK Armed Forces over a 12‐year period

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Trajectories of alcohol misuse among the UK Armed Forces over a 12‐year period. / Palmer, Laura; Norton, Sam; Jones, Margaret et al.
In: Addiction, Vol. 117, No. 1, 01.01.2022, p. 57-67.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Palmer, L, Norton, S, Jones, M, Rona, RJ, Goodwin, L & Fear, NT 2022, 'Trajectories of alcohol misuse among the UK Armed Forces over a 12‐year period', Addiction, vol. 117, no. 1, pp. 57-67. https://doi.org/10.1111/add.15592

APA

Palmer, L., Norton, S., Jones, M., Rona, R. J., Goodwin, L., & Fear, N. T. (2022). Trajectories of alcohol misuse among the UK Armed Forces over a 12‐year period. Addiction, 117(1), 57-67. https://doi.org/10.1111/add.15592

Vancouver

Palmer L, Norton S, Jones M, Rona RJ, Goodwin L, Fear NT. Trajectories of alcohol misuse among the UK Armed Forces over a 12‐year period. Addiction. 2022 Jan 1;117(1):57-67. Epub 2021 Jul 20. doi: 10.1111/add.15592

Author

Palmer, Laura ; Norton, Sam ; Jones, Margaret et al. / Trajectories of alcohol misuse among the UK Armed Forces over a 12‐year period. In: Addiction. 2022 ; Vol. 117, No. 1. pp. 57-67.

Bibtex

@article{3e49194477f94807bdf42113fdcaa65c,
title = "Trajectories of alcohol misuse among the UK Armed Forces over a 12‐year period",
abstract = "AimTo identify the main trajectories of alcohol misuse among UK military personnel from 12 years after the start of the Iraq war (2003) and the factors associated with each trajectory.DesignLongitudinal cohort study with three phases of data collection (2004–06, 2007–09 and 2014–16).SettingUnited Kingdom.ParticipantsServing and ex-serving personnel of the UK Armed Forces (n = 7111) participating at Phase 1 and at least one follow-up phase of the King's Centre for Military Health Research (KCMHR) cohort study.MeasurementsTrajectories of alcohol misuse were derived from scores using the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT-10) over three data collection phases. Demographic and military characteristics were collected and, among the key covariates, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was measured using the PTSD checklist (PCL-C) and childhood interpersonal stress and violence was measured using items from the Adverse Childhood Experiences questionnaire.FindingsFive trajectories of alcohol misuse were identified, including {\textquoteleft}no misuse{\textquoteright} (n = 2249, 31.6%) and {\textquoteleft}hazardous{\textquoteright} (n = 3398, 47.8%), {\textquoteleft}harmful{\textquoteright} (n = 832, 11.7%), {\textquoteleft}severe-to-hazardous{\textquoteright} (n = 258, 5.3%) and {\textquoteleft}severe{\textquoteright} (n = 374, 3.6%) drinking. Substantial changes were evident only among severe drinkers, where more than half reduced over the study period. The factors most strongly associated with belonging to harmful/severe drinking classes were young age, male gender and childhood adversities and antisocial behaviour. Severe drinkers at Phase 1 were more likely to report probable PTSD and shorter military careers and were less likely to serve as Officers. Persistent severe drinkers were less likely to serve in the RAF compared to the Army and were more likely to be reserves. Not misusing alcohol was also associated with reserve status and having left service.ConclusionsIn a cohort of approximately 7000 UK military personnel, trajectories of alcohol misuse appeared stable between 2004 and 2016. More than half of severe drinkers made substantial improvements over the period, but 68% of the cohort continued to drink hazardously or harmfully. Lack of change for the majority of the sample signals the need for strategies to address alcohol misuse and its cultural and psychosocial drivers.",
keywords = "Alcohol misuse, drinking, longitudinal, military, trajectories, UK armed forces, veterans",
author = "Laura Palmer and Sam Norton and Margaret Jones and Rona, {Roberto J.} and Laura Goodwin and Fear, {Nicola T.}",
year = "2022",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/add.15592",
language = "English",
volume = "117",
pages = "57--67",
journal = "Addiction",
issn = "0965-2140",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Trajectories of alcohol misuse among the UK Armed Forces over a 12‐year period

AU - Palmer, Laura

AU - Norton, Sam

AU - Jones, Margaret

AU - Rona, Roberto J.

AU - Goodwin, Laura

AU - Fear, Nicola T.

PY - 2022/1/1

Y1 - 2022/1/1

N2 - AimTo identify the main trajectories of alcohol misuse among UK military personnel from 12 years after the start of the Iraq war (2003) and the factors associated with each trajectory.DesignLongitudinal cohort study with three phases of data collection (2004–06, 2007–09 and 2014–16).SettingUnited Kingdom.ParticipantsServing and ex-serving personnel of the UK Armed Forces (n = 7111) participating at Phase 1 and at least one follow-up phase of the King's Centre for Military Health Research (KCMHR) cohort study.MeasurementsTrajectories of alcohol misuse were derived from scores using the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT-10) over three data collection phases. Demographic and military characteristics were collected and, among the key covariates, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was measured using the PTSD checklist (PCL-C) and childhood interpersonal stress and violence was measured using items from the Adverse Childhood Experiences questionnaire.FindingsFive trajectories of alcohol misuse were identified, including ‘no misuse’ (n = 2249, 31.6%) and ‘hazardous’ (n = 3398, 47.8%), ‘harmful’ (n = 832, 11.7%), ‘severe-to-hazardous’ (n = 258, 5.3%) and ‘severe’ (n = 374, 3.6%) drinking. Substantial changes were evident only among severe drinkers, where more than half reduced over the study period. The factors most strongly associated with belonging to harmful/severe drinking classes were young age, male gender and childhood adversities and antisocial behaviour. Severe drinkers at Phase 1 were more likely to report probable PTSD and shorter military careers and were less likely to serve as Officers. Persistent severe drinkers were less likely to serve in the RAF compared to the Army and were more likely to be reserves. Not misusing alcohol was also associated with reserve status and having left service.ConclusionsIn a cohort of approximately 7000 UK military personnel, trajectories of alcohol misuse appeared stable between 2004 and 2016. More than half of severe drinkers made substantial improvements over the period, but 68% of the cohort continued to drink hazardously or harmfully. Lack of change for the majority of the sample signals the need for strategies to address alcohol misuse and its cultural and psychosocial drivers.

AB - AimTo identify the main trajectories of alcohol misuse among UK military personnel from 12 years after the start of the Iraq war (2003) and the factors associated with each trajectory.DesignLongitudinal cohort study with three phases of data collection (2004–06, 2007–09 and 2014–16).SettingUnited Kingdom.ParticipantsServing and ex-serving personnel of the UK Armed Forces (n = 7111) participating at Phase 1 and at least one follow-up phase of the King's Centre for Military Health Research (KCMHR) cohort study.MeasurementsTrajectories of alcohol misuse were derived from scores using the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT-10) over three data collection phases. Demographic and military characteristics were collected and, among the key covariates, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was measured using the PTSD checklist (PCL-C) and childhood interpersonal stress and violence was measured using items from the Adverse Childhood Experiences questionnaire.FindingsFive trajectories of alcohol misuse were identified, including ‘no misuse’ (n = 2249, 31.6%) and ‘hazardous’ (n = 3398, 47.8%), ‘harmful’ (n = 832, 11.7%), ‘severe-to-hazardous’ (n = 258, 5.3%) and ‘severe’ (n = 374, 3.6%) drinking. Substantial changes were evident only among severe drinkers, where more than half reduced over the study period. The factors most strongly associated with belonging to harmful/severe drinking classes were young age, male gender and childhood adversities and antisocial behaviour. Severe drinkers at Phase 1 were more likely to report probable PTSD and shorter military careers and were less likely to serve as Officers. Persistent severe drinkers were less likely to serve in the RAF compared to the Army and were more likely to be reserves. Not misusing alcohol was also associated with reserve status and having left service.ConclusionsIn a cohort of approximately 7000 UK military personnel, trajectories of alcohol misuse appeared stable between 2004 and 2016. More than half of severe drinkers made substantial improvements over the period, but 68% of the cohort continued to drink hazardously or harmfully. Lack of change for the majority of the sample signals the need for strategies to address alcohol misuse and its cultural and psychosocial drivers.

KW - Alcohol misuse

KW - drinking

KW - longitudinal

KW - military

KW - trajectories

KW - UK armed forces

KW - veterans

U2 - 10.1111/add.15592

DO - 10.1111/add.15592

M3 - Journal article

VL - 117

SP - 57

EP - 67

JO - Addiction

JF - Addiction

SN - 0965-2140

IS - 1

ER -