Alcohol consumption is associated with many diseases, such as several types of cancer, cirrhosis of the liver, and cardiovascular diseases. The death rate due to alcohol use in the United States has increased over the past couple decades, and although drinking rates among adolescents and younger ...
GRANT, Bridget F. (1994). « Alcohol consumption, alcohol abuse and alcohol dependence: The United States as an example », Addiction, vol. 89, no 11, p. 1357‐1365....
The statistics concerning alcohol use in the United States show its prevalence, especially among college students. They also show its consequences. Examine the trends in alcohol consumption in the United States, and understand the consequences of alcohol use. Using Drugs Enjoying an occasional glass...
many people have been drinking more alcohol than they usually do, and maybe more than they should. While drinking alcohol is itself not necessarily a problem, too much alcohol consumption has many potentially serious health consequences. I thought ...
Changes in self-reported health, alcohol consumption, and sleep quality during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United StatesCoronavirusCOVID-19physical healthmental healthalcohol consumptionsleep qualityrandom-effects logitWhen the novel coronavirus entered the US in early 2020, the initial response to ...
Risk factors for pancreatic cancer were evaluated in a cohort study of 17,633 White men in the United States who responded to a mailed questionnaire in 196... Z Wei,JK Mclaughlin,G Gridley,... - 《Cancer Causes & Control》 被引量: 860发表: 1993年 Dietary Folate Consumption and Breast ...
A cross-European study [3] found that during the first months of the COVID-19 lockdown, alcohol consumption had also declined. Economic evidence suggests a shift in beverage consumption during the initial months of the lockdown period. The Institute of Alcohol Studies (IAS) [4] in the UK ...
increase as much as did theworldwidepattern. Wine consumption on a per capita basis actually declined in some countries with traditionally high levels of consumption (e.g., France and Italy), while it rose in some countries with relatively low wine consumption, especially the United States and ...
The average per capita alcohol consumption varies worldwide, being the highest in the European Union with an annual consumption of about 11 L of pure ethanol per capita, followed by the United States with an annual consumption of 9.97 L of pure alcohol. The predominant religions in the Middle...
Alcohol use is the fourth leading cause of preventable death in the United States (after smoking, high blood pressure, and obesity). According to the World Health Organization (WHO), around 2.6 million deaths worldwide were caused by alcohol consumption in 2019, with most of these (2 million...