Saturday, April 27, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Teenage Anxiety Leads To Harmful Drinking

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Nov, 2019 09:17 PM

    Researchers at the University of Bristol have found evidence of an association between generalised anxiety disorder at age 18 and harmful drinking three years later.

     

    The study, published in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence strengthens the evidence for a relationship between anxiety and later alcohol use as the researchers accounted for other factors such as adolescent smoking and cannabis use, and parental anxiety and alcohol use.


    "Helping adolescents to develop positive strategies for coping with anxiety, instead of drinking alcohol, may reduce the risk of future harmful drinking. However, we cannot determine if the relationship is causal, because we used an observational study design," said Maddy Dyer.


    Using questionnaire and clinical interview data from more than 2,000 participants, researchers found generalised anxiety disorder at age 18 was linked to frequent drinking, frequent bingeing, hazardous drinking, and harmful drinking at age 18.


    Generalised anxiety disorder continued to be associated with harmful drinking at age 21.


    Drinking to cope was also strongly associated with more harmful drinking, but it did not appear to influence associations between anxiety and alcohol use.


    Harmful drinking was measured using a special test developed by the World Health Association.


    On average, adolescents with anxiety drank at more harmful levels regardless of whether they tended to drink alcohol for coping reasons or not.


    "Our own research has shown that links between mental health problems, such as anxiety disorders, and alcohol are common and complex," said Mark Leyshon, Senior Policy and Research Manager at Alcohol Change UK.


    For example, anxiety can be both a result of stopping drinking and a risk factor in beginning to drink too much, as this new study suggests.

    "We need more research to help us better understand the connections between alcohol and mental health, as well as high-quality, accessible, integrated support for substance misuse and mental health issues," Leyshon added.

     

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Higher BMI May Lower Your Mental, Physical Health

    Higher BMI May Lower Your Mental, Physical Health
    There is a growing need to prevent obesity as a new study has found that higher body mass index (BMI) may impact your mental as well as physical health.

    Higher BMI May Lower Your Mental, Physical Health

    How Diet Can Aid In Healthy Cellular Ageing In Women

    How Diet Can Aid In Healthy Cellular Ageing In Women
    Having a diet that is rich in fruit, vegetable and whole grain and low in added sugar, sodium and processed meat could help promote healthy cellular ageing in women, a study has showed.

    How Diet Can Aid In Healthy Cellular Ageing In Women

    Your Forehead Wrinkles May Predict Cardiovascular Death Risk

    Your Forehead Wrinkles May Predict Cardiovascular Death Risk
    The wrinkles on your forehead may not be just an inevitable consequence of ageing, but could also signal an early death due to cardiovascular disease (CVD), researchers have warned.

    Your Forehead Wrinkles May Predict Cardiovascular Death Risk

    Indian-American Researchers Unleash Turmeric’s Power To Fight Cancer

    Indian-American Researchers Unleash Turmeric’s Power To Fight Cancer
    A team of Indian-American researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) and at the University of Utah at Salt Lake City, has used an ingenious process to enable curcumin to kill cancer cells.

    Indian-American Researchers Unleash Turmeric’s Power To Fight Cancer

    Exercise May Help Overcome Cocaine Addiction

    Exercising can help individuals, addicted to cocaine, who often have altered neural, behavioral and physiological responses to stress.

    Exercise May Help Overcome Cocaine Addiction

    How Breast Milk Prevents Food Allergies

    How Breast Milk Prevents Food Allergies
    The unique composition of complex sugars in breast milk may prevent future food allergies in childhood, a benefit not found in infant formula, thus underscoring their potential for therapeutic interventions, say researchers.

    How Breast Milk Prevents Food Allergies