Most Viewed Abstracts
1. Report Shows Shift in Starting Salaries for Physicians 2. Recommendations on the use of 18F-FDG PET in oncology 3. Use of Antiemetic Agents in Acute Gastroenteritis 4. Gene expression signatures, clinicopathological features, and individualized therapy in breast cancer 5. AHA Guidelines on Cardiac CT for Assessing Coronary Artery Disease
Your Article Summary
Sociodemographic predictors of transitions across stages of alcohol use, disorders, and remission in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication
Comprehensive Psychiatry, 06/04/09
Kalaydjian A et al. - The transition from abuse to dependence was associated with an early age of onset of regular alcohol use, being previously married, and student status. Remission was predicted by young age and a later age of onset of alcohol abuse.
Related Articles
Alcohol, Tobacco, and Nonmedical Drug Use in Older U.S. Adults: Data from the 2001/02 National Epidemiologic Survey of Alcohol and Related Conditions
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 10/28/09
Relevance Score: 70%
The Long Arm of Expectancies: Adolescent Alcohol Expectancies Predict Adult Alcohol Use
Alcohol and Alcoholism, 10/12/09
Relevance Score: 70%
Alcohol use and related harms in school students in the USA and Australia
Health Promotion International, 11/09/09
Relevance Score: 69%
Packages of Care for Alcohol Use Disorders in Low- And Middle-Income Countries
PLoS Medicine, 10/28/09
Relevance Score: 68%
Alcohol control policies and alcohol consumption by youth: a multi-national study
Addiction, 10/19/09
Relevance Score: 68%
Today in Mental Health...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
Altered Prefrontal and Hippocampal Function During Verbal Encoding and Recognition in People With Prodromal Symptoms of Psychosis
Schizophrenia Bulletin, 11/25/09
Impact of a Social Skills Intervention on the Hostile Attributions of Children With Prenatal Alcohol Exposure
Alcoholism, 11/25/09
Metabolic Alterations in the Amygdala in Borderline Personality Disorder: A Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Study
Biological Psychiatry, 11/25/09
Article Search
Sponsor


See Latest Articles


