
@article{ref1,
title="Factors associated with heavy alcohol consumption in the U.K. armed forces: data from a health survey of Gulf, Bosnia, and era veterans",
journal="Military medicine",
year="2007",
author="Iversen, Amy C. and Waterdrinker, Astrid and Fear, Nicola T. and Greenberg, Neil and Barker, Chris and Hotopf, Matthew and Hull, Lisa and Wessely, Simon",
volume="172",
number="9",
pages="956-961",
abstract="BACKGROUND: Little is known about the patterns of alcohol use in the U.K. Armed Forces or the factors associated with heavy drinking. METHODS: Analysis of existing data from the King's Military Cohort was conducted of a large, randomly selected cohort of service personnel. The original sample consisted of 8,195 service personnel who served in the U.K. Armed Forces in 1991: a third deployed to the Gulf (1990-1991), a third deployed to Bosnia (1992-1997), and the final third, an &quot;Era&quot; comparison group, in the Armed Forces in 1991 but not deployed. For the purposes of this study, female serving personnel were excluded. The study used a &quot;case-control&quot; study design nested within the above cohort; &quot;heavy drinkers&quot; (those who drank &gt;30 units/week) were compared with &quot;light drinkers&quot; (those who drank &lt;21 units a week). RESULTS: Heavy drinking was associated with current military service and being unmarried or separated/divorced. Heavy drinking was more common in younger personnel who had deployed to Bosnia. Those who drank heavily were also more likely to smoke; heavy drinking was associated with poorer subjective physical and mental health. CONCLUSIONS: Certain subgroups of the Armed Forces appear to be more at risk and it may be possible to target resources to such individuals to improve detection and allow prompt treatment.   <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0026-4075",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}