Discrimination May Increase Risk of Severe Alcohol Use in Minorities

Racial and ethnic discrimination may increase the risk that members of minority groups will experience severe alcohol use disorder (AUD), according to areport inDrug and Alcohol Dependence.“Our findings [should] prompt researchers and practitioners to consider the extent to which systems of oppression can impact the pathogenesis, trajectories, and recoveries (including relapse) of AUD, and how shifting policies and practices can move toward the dismantling of oppression that give ri se to illnesses,” wrote Joseph E. Glass, Ph.D., M.S.W., of Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute and colleagues.The authors analyzed data from 17,115 racial/ethnic minorities who participated in the National Epidemiological Survey on Alcohol-Related Conditions III (NESARC-III), a national survey that took place in 2012-2013. This included the responses of individuals who identified as American Indian or Alaskan Native; Asian, Native Hawaiian, or Other Pacific Islander; Black or African American; and Hispanic or Latino.During in-person interviews, participants were evaluated using the AUD and Associated Disabilities Interview Schedule-5. (AUD severity levels were classified as mild, moderate, or severe: endorsing 2 −3, 4–5, or ≥6DSM-5 criteria, respectively.) The participants were also asked how often in the past year they felt they had “experienced discrimination, been prevented from doing something, or been hassled or made to feel inferior” because of their race or ...
Source: Psychiatr News - Category: Psychiatry Tags: alcohol use disorder AUD discrimination Drug and Alcohol Dependence ethnicity National Epidemiological Survey on Alcohol-Related Conditions III race Source Type: research