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Alcohol and WomenMuch of
our knowledge of alcoholism has been gathered from studies conducted
with a predominance of male subjects. Recent studies involving more female
subjects reveal that drinking differs between men and women.
Studies in
the general population indicate that fewer women drink than men. It is
estimated that of the 15.1 million alcohol-abusing or
alcohol-dependent individuals in the United States, approximately 4.6
million (nearly one-third) are women. On the whole, women who drink consume
less alcohol and have fewer alcohol-related problems and dependence
symptoms than men, yet among the heaviest drinkers, women equal or surpass men
in the number of problems that result from their drinking.
Drinking
behavior differs with the age, life role, and marital status of women.. Whereas
younger women (aged 18-34) report higher rates of drinking-related problems
than do older women, the incidence of alcohol dependence is greater
among middle-aged women (aged 35-49).
Heath and colleagues studied
drinking behavior among a select sample of female twins to identify possible
environmental factors that may modulate drinking behavior. They reported that,
among women, marital status appears to modify the effects drinking habits.
Several researchers have explored whether drinking patterns and
alcohol-related problems vary among women of different racial or ethnic groups.
Black women (46 percent) are more likely to abstain from alcohol than white
women (34 percent) (9,10). Further, although it is commonly assumed that a
larger proportion of black women drink heavily, researchers have disproved this
assumption: Equal proportions of black and white women drink heavily.
Black women report fewer alcohol-related personal and social problems than
white women, yet a greater proportion of black women experience
alcohol-related health problems.
Data from self-report surveys
suggest that Hispanic women are infrequent drinkers or abstainers, but this may
change as they enter new social and work arenas. Gilbert found that reports of
abstention are greater among Hispanic women who have immigrated to the United
States; reports of moderate or heavy drinking are greater among younger,
American-born Hispanic women.
The interval between onset of
drinking-related problems and entry into alcohol addiction
treatment appears to be shorter for women than for men.
Moreover, studies of women alcoholics in treatment suggest that they
often experience greater physiological impairment earlier in their drinking
careers, despite having consumed less alcohol than men. These findings suggest
that the development of consequences associated with heavy drinking may be
accelerated or "telescoped" in women.
In addition to these many
psychosocial and epidemiological differences, the sexes also experience
different physiological effects of alcohol. Women become intoxicated
after drinking smaller quantities of alcohol than are needed to produce
intoxication in men. Three possible mechanisms may explain this response.
First, women have lower total body water content than men of comparable
size. After alcohol is consumed, it diffuses uniformly into all body water,
both inside and outside cells. Because of their smaller quantity of body water,
women achieve higher concentrations of alcohol in their blood than men after
drinking equivalent amounts of alcohol. More simply, blood alcohol
concentration in women may be likened to the result of dropping the same
quantity of alcohol into a smaller pail of water.
Third, fluctuations
in gonadal hormone levels during the menstrual cycle may affect the rate of
alcohol metabolism, making a woman more susceptible to elevated blood
alcohol concentrations at different points in the cycle. Research findings to
date, however, have been inconsistent.
Chronic alcohol abuse
exacts a greater physical toll on women than on men. Female alcoholics have
death rates 50 to 100 percent higher than those of male alcoholics. Further, a
greater percentage of female alcoholics die from suicides, alcohol-related
accidents, circulatory disorders, and cirrhosis of the liver.
Increasing evidence suggests that the detrimental effects of alcohol
on the liver are more severe for women than for men. Women develop
alcoholic liver disease, particularly alcoholic cirrhosis and hepatitis, after
a comparatively shorter period of heavy drinking and at a lower level of daily
drinking than men. Proportionately more alcoholic women die from cirrhosis than
do alcoholic men.
The exact mechanisms that underlie women's heightened
vulnerability to alcohol-induced liver damage are unclear. Differences in body
weight and fluid content between men and women may be contributing factors. In
addition, Johnson and Williams suggested that the combined effect of estrogens
and alcohol may augment liver damage. Finally, alcoholic women may be
more susceptible to liver damage because of the diminished activity of gastric
alcohol dehydrogenase in first-pass metabolism.
Drinking also may be
associated with an increased risk for breast cancer. After reviewing
epidemiological data on alcohol consumption and the incidence of breast cancer,
Longnecker and colleagues reported that risk increases when a woman consumes 1
ounce or more of absolute alcohol daily. Increased risk appears to be related
directly to the effects of alcohol. Moreover, risk for breast cancer and lower
levels of alcohol consumption are weakly associated. Data from other studies,
however, do not concur with these findings, suggesting that more research is
needed to explore the relationship between drinking and breast cancer.
Menstrual disorders (e.g., painful menstruation, heavy flow,
premenstrual discomfort, and irregular or absent cycles) have been associated
with chronic heavy drinking. These disorders can have adverse effects on
fertility. Further, continued drinking may lead to early menopause.
Animal studies have provided data that replicate the findings of
studies in humans to determine the effects of chronic alcohol
consumption on female reproductive function. Studies in rodents and monkeys
demonstrated that prolonged alcohol exposure disrupts estrus regularity and
increases the incidence of ovulatory failure.
Researchers have begun to
examine whether women and men require distinct alcohol treatment
approaches. It has been suggested that women alcoholics may encounter different
conditions that facilitate or discourage their entry into treatment.
Women represent 25.4 percent of alcoholism clients in
traditional treatment centers in the United States. Although it appears
that they comprise a small proportion of the treatment population (25 percent
women compared with 75 percent men), the proportion of female alcoholics to
male alcoholics in treatment is similar to the proportion of all female
alcoholics to male alcoholics (30 percent women to 70 percent men).
Women alcoholics may encounter motivators and barriers to
seeking treatment that differ from those encountered by men. Fewer women than
men reach treatment through the criminal justice system or through employee
assistance programs. Lack of child care is one of the most frequently reported
barriers to treatment for alcoholic women.
Sokolow and colleagues
attempted to compare treatment outcome between men and women and
reported that, among those who completed treatment, abstinence was slightly
higher among women than among men. Women had a higher abstinence rate if
treated in a medically oriented alcoholism facility, whereas the abstinence
rate was higher for men treated in a peer group-oriented facility. Treatment
outcome was better for women treated in a facility with a smaller proportion of
female clients and better for men in a facility with a larger proportion of
female clients. This study provided preliminary data on gender-specific
treatment outcome; however, the trials were not controlled. Although the
question of whether women should have separate treatment opportunities is an
important one, the supporting evidence still has not been found.
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