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The role of alcohol use by females and IV has been less well-studied than for males, however, female alcohol use has also been identified as a risk factor for both perpetration and victimisation. Moreover, alcohol use is more strongly linked to victimisation among women than victimisation among men in intimate partner violence (IPV) [ 44 , 45 ].
8 mar 2024 · It can sometimes impact women differently than men. Alcohol can potentially influence the brain, liver, heart, reproductive system, pregnancy, and increase the risk of certain cancers. Women who drink alcohol are also at greater risk for experiencing negative social effects.
22 wrz 2018 · For females, the alcohol-attributable burden increased with age, while for males the burden increased until between 55–65 years of age, after which attributable burden decreased. Females, particularly in high SDI locations, experienced some protective effects for ischaemic heart disease and diabetes beyond 60 years of age.
20 sie 2020 · Abstract. Recent evidence indicates that the United States is facing a public health crisis of alcohol misuse and alcohol use disorder (AUD), which has been fueled in part by dramatic rises in binge and heavy drinking and prevalence of AUD in women. Historically, alcohol misuse and AUD have been more prevalent in men than in women.
1 sie 2022 · Excessive alcohol use is a leading cause of preventable death in the U.S. 1 and was responsible for an average of >95,000 deaths each year during 2011–2015. 2 It is a risk factor for both unintentional and intentional injuries. 3 Binge drinking (i.e., the consumption of 4 or more drinks for women or 5 or more drinks for men on an occasion or ...
14 gru 2011 · A retrospective register-based forensic autopsy study of all deaths of women due to accidental alcohol intoxication (AI) over a 12-year period (1994-2005) was performed in order to evaluate the locations, circumstances, mechanisms and causes of death of women who died due to AAI.
1 lis 2023 · Between 2018 and 2020, alcohol-related death rates among men increased by an average of 12.5% per year; for women, the annual average increased nearly 15%. Several biological factors make women more susceptible to alcohol's effects, the study authors said.