Hospital morbidity and alcohol consumption in less severe psychiatric disorder: 7-year outcomes
- PMID: 16738346
- DOI: 10.1192/bjp.188.6.554
Hospital morbidity and alcohol consumption in less severe psychiatric disorder: 7-year outcomes
Abstract
Background: Substance use by people with severe psychiatric morbidity is associated with negative outcomes.
Aims: To assess in adults with less severe psychiatric morbidity the relationship between alcohol consumption and subsequent 7-year hospital admissions, and the development and recurrence of alcohol use disorders.
Method: Follow-up data were assembled via a population-based hospital record-linkage system.
Results: Baseline alcohol use groups were: dependent (n=31), harmful (n=114), moderate (n=621) and abstinent (n=249). The moderate but not the abstinent group had fewer mental health admissions and a longer time to first admission than the harmful and dependent groups. Both the moderate and the abstinent groups had longer times to 'all-cause' admissions than the dependent group. Many of those with alcohol use disorders at baseline relapsed (66%) but few (14%) developed a first-time alcohol use disorder.
Conclusions: Overall, moderate alcohol consumption among those with less severe psychiatric morbidity was not associated with more mental health admissions; those with alcohol dependence had poorer health outcomes than the remaining categories.
Comment in
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Moderate alcohol use and mental health.Br J Psychiatry. 2006 Dec;189:566-7; author reply 567. doi: 10.1192/bjp.189.6.566a. Br J Psychiatry. 2006. PMID: 17139051 No abstract available.
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