The Association of Alcohol Consumption with Self-Reported Illness

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Date

1995

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

This is final draft for Psychological Reports

Abstract

Many reports over the years have indicated an association between alcohol consumption and infectious illness among chronic heavy drinkers; however, many patients in these studies have been chronically ill. Thus the question of whether alcohol can appreciably influence immunity in humans and affect the incidence of infectious diseases remains largely unanswered. For this study over 1,100 undergraduate students from a general education course at large midwestern university were surveyed. Students were asked about their drinking habits and acute health problems. Analyses showed no increase in acute health problems or upper respiratory infections in students drinking between one and 21 drinks per week. However, students drinking 28 or more alcoholic drinks per week had significantly more health problems in the aggregate and those drinking more than 22 drinks per week had more upper respiratory infections compared to the other students including non drinkers. It was concluded that excessive alcohol intake increased the risk of respiratory infections and acute illnesses in this sample of students, but more moderate alcohol consumption had little effect on the risk for these health problems.

Description

This document is the final draft of the article from IUScholarworks: http://hdl.handle.net/2022/26441. Copies of the Student Health and Lifestyle Questionnaire used in this study are available on IUScholarworks: http://hdl.handle.net/2022/17338

Keywords

Heavy drinkers only suffered more illness

Citation

Engs, Ruth C. and Marlene Aldo-Benson, “The Association of Alcohol Consumption with Self-Reported Illness.” Psychological Reports, 76:727-736, 1995.

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DOI

Link(s) to data and video for this item

The published article can be found at https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.2466/pr0.1995.76.3.727

Relation

Rights

This work is licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial license. For permission to reuse this work for commercial purposes, please contact Dr. Ruth Engs or the IU Archives. NOTE: A finding aid for published papers and manuscripts can be found at the IU Archive: http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/findingaids/view?doc.view=entire_text&docId=InU-Ar-VAC0859

Type

Article