TY - JOUR PY - 2012// TI - Self-reported Life Satisfaction and Alcohol use: A 15-year follow-up of Healthy Adult Twins JO - Alcohol and alcoholism A1 - Koivumaa-Honkanen, H. A1 - Kaprio, Jaakko A. A1 - Korhonen, T. A1 - Honkanen, R. J. A1 - Heikkilä, K. A1 - Koskenvuo, Karoliina SP - 160 EP - 168 VL - 47 IS - 2 N2 - AIMS: To study the bidirectional relationships between life satisfaction (LS) and alcohol use. METHODS: Health questionnaires were administered in 1975, 1981 and 1990 to a population-based sample of healthy Finnish twins aged 18-45 at baseline (n = 14,083). These included a LS scale and three indicators for adverse alcohol use: binge drinking, passing out and high consumption (women/men ≥400/800 g/month). In longitudinal analyses, logistic regression, pair-wise case-control analyses and growth models were applied. RESULTS: All alcohol indicators increased the age-adjusted risk of becoming dissatisfied regardless of study period [binge drinking odds ratio (OR)(1975-1990 )= 1.29; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.12-1.50; high consumption OR(1975-1990 )= 1.60; 1.29-1.99 and passing out OR(1981-1990 )= 2.01; 1.57-2.57]. Also, the dissatisfied had an increased subsequent risk for adverse alcohol use. The risk for passing out due to drinking (OR(1975-1990 )= 1.50; 1.22-1.86) was increased regardless of study period, while high consumption (OR(1975-1981 )= 1.97; 1.40-2.77; OR(1981-1990 )= 2.48; 1.50-4.12) and binge drinking (OR(1975-1981 )= 1.37; 1.12-1.67) showed some variation by the study period. Predictions remained after multiple adjustments. Longitudinally, high consumption predicted dissatisfaction somewhat more strongly than vice versa. The change/levels within the whole range of LS and alcohol consumption were only slightly associated in the entire study population. CONCLUSION: Life dissatisfaction and adverse alcohol use reciprocally predict each other prospectively. The heavier the alcohol use the stronger the relationship.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0735-0414 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alcalc/agr151 ID - ref1 ER -