Affective disorders, anxiety disorders and psychological distress in non-drinkers.

J Affect Disord

National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200, Australia.

Published: April 2007

Background: Non-drinkers have elevated levels of psychological distress but a recent study reported no elevation in prevalence of diagnosed disorders. We aimed to determine the prevalence of affective and anxiety disorders (from the CIDI-A) in current abstainers and contrast results with findings for psychological distress (K10) in the same sample.

Methods: Cross-sectional, representative household survey of adult Australians.

Results: Non-/occasional drinkers had higher levels of psychological distress than light drinkers, and distress in heavy drinkers was even higher. Heavy drinkers also had the highest rates of most disorders. Non-/occasional drinkers showed significantly elevated prevalence only of dysthymia, agoraphobia and posttraumatic stress disorder compared with light drinkers.

Limitations: Statistical power was limited for investigating low prevalence disorders. History of alcohol consumption was not collected. The CIDI-A and K10 have finite validity.

Conclusions: This study confirmed J-shaped relationships between psychological distress and alcohol consumption. Although affective and anxiety disorders also showed non-linear relationships with alcohol consumption, non-/occasional drinkers are not at increased risk for all disorders compared to light drinkers. The pattern of symptomatology in non-/occasional drinkers may be of a different character to that in heavy drinkers, as well as being less severe.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2006.09.006DOI Listing

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