TY - JOUR PY - 1998// TI - Male drinking and violence-related injury in the emergency room JO - Addiction A1 - Rosovsky, Haydee A1 - Cherpitel, Cheryl J. A1 - Borges, G. SP - 103 EP - 112 VL - 93 IS - 1 N2 - AIMS: To present epidemiological measures of associations between violence-related injuries (assaults and fights), alcohol consumption prior to the event, and drinking patterns among males attending hospital emergency rooms (ERs) in Mexico City. DESIGN: All patients were interviewed and breath tested for alcohol consumption. The data were analyzed using a case-control design. SETTING: Eight ERs in Mexico City that were representative of the types of emergency care systems available in that city (from public, private and social security systems hospitals). PARTICIPANTS: Cases were males patients (n = 445) admitted to the ER because of a fight or an assault. The control group was comprised of patients (n = 320) admitted to the ER because of accidents that are less frequently reported a alcohol-related (i.e. work-place accidents, animal bites or recreational accidents excluding near drowning). MEASUREMENTS: A breath sample to estimate BAG, as well as an interviewer-administered questionnaire were used. FINDINGS: Alcohol consumption prior to injury was found to be a more important risk factor than usual drinking for injuries resulting from violence, while quantity of usual alcohol consumption was more predictive of violence-related injuries than frequency of drinking. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest the importance of using more appropriate control groups when estimating associations of alcohol and violence-related injuries so that associations will not be underestimated. More research is needed to establish unbiased estimates of alcohol-related violence.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0965-2140 UR - http://dx.doi.org/ ID - ref1 ER -