Are You an
Alcoholic
www.TheCitizensWhoCare.org
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The
holidays are over. Resolutions are wearing thin. It's a time
of year when many people wonder if they have a drinking
problem.
More than 30% of
Americans engage in risky drinking at some point in their
lives, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse
and Alcoholism. But there's no consensus on exactly what an
"alcoholic" is. Even Alcoholics Anonymous relies on
alcoholics to diagnose themselves.
Researchers have made
up dozens of screening tests over the years. According to
one developed for Johns Hopkins University Hospital years
ago that still pops up on the Web, I'm "definitely an
alcoholic" because I answered yes to at least three of 20
questions: I "crave a drink at a definite time of day"
(evenings, mostly) and drink alone (sometimes) and drink to
"escape from worries or troubles" (doesn't everyone who
drinks?).
But Alcoholscreening.org
says I'm "below the range usually associated with harmful
drinking or alcoholism" since I have only a glass or two of
wine when I drink.
The authoritative
American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, or DSM-IV, separates
alcohol abuse from alcohol dependence, based partly on the
problems the drinking causes. You qualify for a diagnosis of
"abuse" if you've done any one of these in the past year:
drunk alcohol in hazardous situations, like driving; kept
drinking despite social or interpersonal problems; had legal
problems related to alcohol or failed to fulfill major
obligations at work, school or home because of
drinking.
You've moved on to
"dependence" if you've done any three of these seven: drunk
more or longer than you intended; been unable to cut down or
stop; needed more alcohol to get the same effect; had
withdrawal symptoms without it; spent more time drinking or
recovering; neglected other activities or continued to drink
despite psychological or physical problems.
Experts long believed
that abuse progressed to dependence, which almost inevitably
became chronic and relapsing -- but that was based on
observing severely addicted people in treatment programs.
Several large new surveys have shown that drinking patterns
in the general population are much more varied, with milder
forms of dependence. Some 43% of daily heavy drinkers don't
fit into either DSM-IV category, according to one big
national sample, even though they are setting themselves up
for serious health and addiction problems.
Abuse
vs. Dependence
"Some people will
abuse alcohol -- driving drunk, for example -- but they only
drink heavily once a month. They can remain stable for a
long time and not progress to dependence," says Mark L.
Willenbring, director of the division of treatment and
recovery research at the NIAAA. "And people can be dependent
and not have abuse problems at all. They're successful
students. They're good parents, good workers. They watch
their weight. They go the gym. Then they go home and have
four martinis or two bottles of wine. Are they alcoholics?
You bet. And the goal is to get treatment for these folks,
earlier, that is acceptable and attractive and
effective."
To that end, some
experts want the DSM-V -- the new edition now being compiled
-- to combine abuse and dependence into a single
"alcohol-use disorder" that ranges in severity, taking into
account harmful drinking patterns and other symptoms. The
aim is for simmering problems to be spotted
sooner.
As one former
treatment counselor says, "The conventional wisdom held that
alcoholics had to hit bottom before they could get better.
We'd like to raise that bottom so that people don't have to
fall as far before they get help."
Many heavy drinkers
are very high-functioning -- until they can't function
anymore. "Alcoholics can be high achievers in the short run,
because they're driven and compulsive," says Charlie, a New
York attorney who, like all AA members, wants to remain
anonymous. Charlie was drinking about a fifth of Johnnie
Walker most nights when it began to show. "I'd tell my
secretary I was in a meeting with a client, but I'd be home
and only starting to feel human by about noon. Then I'd try
to do eight hours of work in four hours," he says. This went
on for seven years, until he finally went into rehab. He's
been sober now for 26 years.
Charlie says many
heavy drinkers, especially those who grew up around
alcoholics, set a private benchmark in their denial. "They
say to themselves, 'As long as I'm not making a fool of
myself in a bar, or drinking in the morning, or as long as
I'm still showing up for work, then I'm not an
alcoholic.'"
You know you've hit
bottom, he adds, "when your behavior spirals downward faster
than you can lower your standards."
Thinking
You're Immune
Ruth, a nursing
supervisor in Las Vegas, hid her quart-a-day whiskey habit
from work for about five years -- "until my husband and my
employer both invited me out of those positions at the same
time," she says. "That got my attention."
Both of Ruth's parents
died of alcohol-related illnesses, but she thought her
medical training would protect her from getting seriously
addicted. Doctors and clergy who drink heavily often have
the notion that they are somehow immune to the problems they
see in others, she observes, and affluent people can pay
others to take care of them. "People with less money and
less education often get the message faster," she says, now
that she's been sober for 37 years.
NIAAA officials say
that in recognizing a drinking problem, the label
"alcoholic" is less important than harmful patterns of
drinking, which they describe as drinking too much, too fast
or too much, too often.
Too much, too fast
means consuming more than four drinks in two hours for men,
and more than three in two hours for women. That's a level
that, on average, makes people legally drunk and impairs
brain function. (A standard U.S. drink, by the way, is 12
oz. of beer, 5 oz. of wine or a 1.5 oz. shot of 80 proof
spirits, according to government agencies.)
Even if you stay
within those limits each day, you can be drinking too much,
too often, if you have more than 14 drinks a week for men,
and more than 7 for women. That's the kind of chronic use
that raises the risks of a long list of health problems,
including liver and cardiovascular disease, pancreatitis,
dementia, depression and numerous cancers.
How those weekly
drinks are distributed is also important. "If you drink
seven drinks in two days, that's hazardous -- you're drunk
two days a week," says Ting-Kai Li, the NIAAA's director.
"If you drink two a day for seven days, that's not harmful.
In fact, it may even be beneficial for some people, lowering
their cardiovascular risk."
Individual responses
to alcohol vary, of course, based on genetics, brain
chemistry, metabolism and other factors. Your risk is
already elevated if you have a family history of alcohol
abuse, have health problems such as depression, take certain
medications or you started drinking at an early age. "If you
have a family history or other co-morbidity, then the
general advice is, don't drink at all," says Dr.
Li.
If you're worried that
you may be drinking too much, you've already met a key
criterion on some screening tests. (Like the old saying
about mice in your house, if you think you have a problem,
you probably do.)
Counting drinks very
carefully to stay within the limit can be a sign of trouble
too, says Ruth. "The glass keeps getting bigger and bigger
or you forget to add the mixer." She suggests trying to go
30 or 60 days without drinking. "If it doesn't bother you,
you're OK. But if you're desperate for that 30 days to end,
or you can't make it, then get help." She suggests trying
one of AA's public information meetings. "If you're not an
alcoholic, you can't catch it from them," she
says.
Your family doctor is
another place to start. The NIAAA recently issued a guide
for primary-care physicians (www.niaaa.nih.gov/guide
)
to enlist their help in spotting alcohol problems. It starts
with a single screening question: How many times in the last
year have you had more than five drinks (four for women) in
a day? If the answer is even once, doctors are advised to
discuss the risks of harmful drinking with their patients,
along with steps patients can take to cut back, including
new medications that can help curb alcohol
cravings.
In
Remission
The encouraging news
from the NIAAA's recent research is that many people do cut
down or quit on their own. "That's the real mind blower,"
says Dr. Willenbring. "Only about 15% of the people who
develop alcohol dependence in their lifetime have the
severe, relapsing form. Most people -- 72% -- have a single
episode [of addiction] lasting on average three or
four years and then they go into remission and stay there. A
lot of them are abstaining." For many people, that spate of
heavy drinking happens in college -- the peak years are 18
to 24, says Dr. Willenbring. "Then they mature out of it and
get on with their lives."
For those who don't,
alcoholism, however it's defined, is still a profound
problem, and the third leading cause of preventable death in
the U.S., after smoking and obesity. But being aware of your
risks and cutting down now if you need to may prevent you
from becoming one of those statistics.
Source: Today, Melinda
Beck, former editor of The Wall Street Journal's
Marketplace section, makes her debut as writer of the
weekly Health Journal. E-Mail
questions to her, and read her responses in the Health
Mailbox column, which will appear in coming
weeks.
www.interventions.net/articles_010808_wsj.html
©2007-2011,
www.TheCitizensWhoCare.org/brookings/alcoholic.html
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