This digital document is an article from Journal of Studies on Alcohol, published by Alcohol Research Documentation, Inc. on July 1, 1997. The length of the article is 7080 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
From the author: Objective: This study tested the ability of DSM-IV physiological alcohol dependence to predict multiple indices of medical problems and relapse behavior. It also tested the ability of three additional variables--DSM-IV nonphysiological dependence, an alternative dichotomous criterion for coding physiological dependence and a dimensional measure of physiological dependence--to predict medical problems and relapse behavior in alcoholism. Method: A heterogeneous group of 365 patients was recruited from eight addictions treatment programs in the northeastern United States. A multidimensional assessment battery able to diagnose the presence of physiological dependence according to each of three systems--the criteria of DSM-IV alternative dichotomous criteria and a dimensional scale--was administered about 2 weeks after admission, and 241 subjects were reinterviewed 6 months later. The three systems were compared for their ability to predict a variety of external measures of medical complications and relapse liability. Results: Physiological alcohol dependence as diagnosed by DSM-IV bore no relationship to either risk for medical problems or relapse behavior. Further analyses showed that this failure was due to operational problems of physiological dependence in DSM-IV, rather than to a lack of conceptual merit for physiological dependence per se as a course specifier. Use of alternative criteria for coding physiological dependence which are difficult and less internally consistent, and use of a dimensional measure, found improved relationships with the external validators. Conclusions: Contrary to early reports, physiological dependence can serve as a course specifier for alcohol problems, but must be more sensitively scaled than it was in DSM-IV. Tests of alternative options suggest that a multistage criterion to replace DSM-IV's dichotomous criterion is the best remedy.
From the supplier: Measurements of physical alcohol dependence using DSM-IV criteria do not seem to accurately predict a return to drinking or further medical complications. Two hundred forty-one patients were evaluated using three screening systems as they entered a treatment center and again six months later. The two other criteria systems, alternative dichotomous criteria and a dimensional scale, were better able to predict later complications than the DSM-IV screening system.
Citation Details
Title: Physiological alcohol dependence as a "specifier" of risk for medical problems and relapse liability in DSM-IV.
Author: James Langenbucher
Publication:Journal of Studies on Alcohol (Refereed)
Date: July 1, 1997
Publisher: Alcohol Research Documentation, Inc.
Volume: v58 Issue: n4 Page: p341(10)
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Physiological alcohol dependence as a "specifier" of risk for medical problems and relapse liability in DSM-IV.: An article from: Journal of Studies on Alcohol
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Book Details
Author(s)James Langenbucher, Tammy Chung, Jon Morgenstern, Erich Labouvie, Peter E. Nathan, Lawrence Bavly
PublisherAlcohol Research Documentation, Inc.
ISBN / ASINB00097NE34
ISBN-13978B00097NE39
AvailabilityAvailable for download now
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸