Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Trajectories of alcohol use in the UK military ...

Associated organisational unit

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Trajectories of alcohol use in the UK military and associations with mental health.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Trajectories of alcohol use in the UK military and associations with mental health. / Goodwin, L; Norton, S; Fear, NT et al.
In: Addictive Behaviors, Vol. 75, 31.12.2017, p. 130-137.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Goodwin, L, Norton, S, Fear, NT, Jones, M, Hull, L, Wessely, S & Rona, RJ 2017, 'Trajectories of alcohol use in the UK military and associations with mental health.', Addictive Behaviors, vol. 75, pp. 130-137. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addbeh.2017.07.010

APA

Goodwin, L., Norton, S., Fear, NT., Jones, M., Hull, L., Wessely, S., & Rona, RJ. (2017). Trajectories of alcohol use in the UK military and associations with mental health. Addictive Behaviors, 75, 130-137. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addbeh.2017.07.010

Vancouver

Goodwin L, Norton S, Fear NT, Jones M, Hull L, Wessely S et al. Trajectories of alcohol use in the UK military and associations with mental health. Addictive Behaviors. 2017 Dec 31;75:130-137. Epub 2017 Jul 19. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2017.07.010

Author

Goodwin, L ; Norton, S ; Fear, NT et al. / Trajectories of alcohol use in the UK military and associations with mental health. In: Addictive Behaviors. 2017 ; Vol. 75. pp. 130-137.

Bibtex

@article{4af416b8b8f3486db744c93e90997b15,
title = "Trajectories of alcohol use in the UK military and associations with mental health.",
abstract = "IntroductionThere are higher levels of alcohol misuse in the military compared to the general population. Yet there is a dearth of research in military populations on the longitudinal patterns of alcohol use. This study aims to identify group trajectories of alcohol consumption in the UK military and to identify associations with childhood adversity, deployment history and mental disorder.MethodsData on weekly alcohol consumption across an eight year period and three phases of a UK military cohort study (n = 667) were examined using growth mixture modelling.ResultsFive alcohol trajectory classes were identified: mid-average drinkers (55%), abstainers (4%), low level drinkers (19%), decreasing drinkers (3%) and heavy drinkers (19%). Alcohol consumption remained stable over the three periods in all classes, other than in the small decreasing trajectory class. Individuals in the heavy drinking class were more likely to have deployed to Iraq. Abstainers and heavy drinkers were more likely to report post-traumatic stress disorders at baseline compared to average drinkers.ConclusionsHeavy drinkers in the UK military did not change their drinking pattern over a period of eight years. This highlights the need to develop effective preventive programmes to lessen the physical and psychological consequences of long-term heavy alcohol use. Individuals with a mental health problem appeared more likely to either be drinking at a high level or to be abstaining from use.",
author = "L Goodwin and S Norton and NT Fear and M Jones and L Hull and S Wessely and RJ Rona",
year = "2017",
month = dec,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.addbeh.2017.07.010",
language = "English",
volume = "75",
pages = "130--137",
journal = "Addictive Behaviors",
issn = "0306-4603",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Trajectories of alcohol use in the UK military and associations with mental health.

AU - Goodwin, L

AU - Norton, S

AU - Fear, NT

AU - Jones, M

AU - Hull, L

AU - Wessely, S

AU - Rona, RJ

PY - 2017/12/31

Y1 - 2017/12/31

N2 - IntroductionThere are higher levels of alcohol misuse in the military compared to the general population. Yet there is a dearth of research in military populations on the longitudinal patterns of alcohol use. This study aims to identify group trajectories of alcohol consumption in the UK military and to identify associations with childhood adversity, deployment history and mental disorder.MethodsData on weekly alcohol consumption across an eight year period and three phases of a UK military cohort study (n = 667) were examined using growth mixture modelling.ResultsFive alcohol trajectory classes were identified: mid-average drinkers (55%), abstainers (4%), low level drinkers (19%), decreasing drinkers (3%) and heavy drinkers (19%). Alcohol consumption remained stable over the three periods in all classes, other than in the small decreasing trajectory class. Individuals in the heavy drinking class were more likely to have deployed to Iraq. Abstainers and heavy drinkers were more likely to report post-traumatic stress disorders at baseline compared to average drinkers.ConclusionsHeavy drinkers in the UK military did not change their drinking pattern over a period of eight years. This highlights the need to develop effective preventive programmes to lessen the physical and psychological consequences of long-term heavy alcohol use. Individuals with a mental health problem appeared more likely to either be drinking at a high level or to be abstaining from use.

AB - IntroductionThere are higher levels of alcohol misuse in the military compared to the general population. Yet there is a dearth of research in military populations on the longitudinal patterns of alcohol use. This study aims to identify group trajectories of alcohol consumption in the UK military and to identify associations with childhood adversity, deployment history and mental disorder.MethodsData on weekly alcohol consumption across an eight year period and three phases of a UK military cohort study (n = 667) were examined using growth mixture modelling.ResultsFive alcohol trajectory classes were identified: mid-average drinkers (55%), abstainers (4%), low level drinkers (19%), decreasing drinkers (3%) and heavy drinkers (19%). Alcohol consumption remained stable over the three periods in all classes, other than in the small decreasing trajectory class. Individuals in the heavy drinking class were more likely to have deployed to Iraq. Abstainers and heavy drinkers were more likely to report post-traumatic stress disorders at baseline compared to average drinkers.ConclusionsHeavy drinkers in the UK military did not change their drinking pattern over a period of eight years. This highlights the need to develop effective preventive programmes to lessen the physical and psychological consequences of long-term heavy alcohol use. Individuals with a mental health problem appeared more likely to either be drinking at a high level or to be abstaining from use.

U2 - 10.1016/j.addbeh.2017.07.010

DO - 10.1016/j.addbeh.2017.07.010

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28734152

VL - 75

SP - 130

EP - 137

JO - Addictive Behaviors

JF - Addictive Behaviors

SN - 0306-4603

ER -