2014
DOI: 10.1177/1403494814523343
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Alcohol use and early mortality in Swedish middle-aged women: Nine-year follow-up of the Women’s Health in Lund Area study

Abstract: Aims: The majority of prospective studies on alcohol use and mortality risk indicate that nondrinkers are at increased risk of death compared to moderate drinkers. This paper investigates the association between middle-aged women's alcohol use and mortality, controlling for socio-demographic and health variables. An association between alcohol use and hospital inpatient care is also analysed.Methods: Baseline data were collected 1995-2000 in a population-based cohort of 6917 women aged 50-59 years living in so… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…There was a protective effect also in our data, but the effect was negligible. Moderate alcohol consumption has been reported to be positively associated with socioeconomic status, and being an abstainer is often related to reduced health in the first place (Rundberg et al, 2014). Thus, different levels of controlling for socioeconomic status and health may explain some of the discrepancy with previous studies.…”
Section: Alcohol Consumptionmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…There was a protective effect also in our data, but the effect was negligible. Moderate alcohol consumption has been reported to be positively associated with socioeconomic status, and being an abstainer is often related to reduced health in the first place (Rundberg et al, 2014). Thus, different levels of controlling for socioeconomic status and health may explain some of the discrepancy with previous studies.…”
Section: Alcohol Consumptionmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…There were 724 estimates of the risk relationship between level of alcohol consumption and all-cause mortality from 107 unique studies, including 4 838 825 participants and 425 564 deaths available for the analysis. Table 1 describes the sample characteristics of the metadata.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Table 1 describes the sample characteristics of the metadata. Of 39 studiesreporting RR estimates for men and women separately, 33 were for males only, 8 for females only, and 30 for both sexes. Twenty-one studies (220 risk estimates) were free from abstainer bias (ie, had a reference group of strictly defined lifetime abstainers).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Four studies were conducted in all-male samples, 5,30,40,47 and four studies were in all-female samples. 27,33,44,48 intervention occurred or data was collected, the HDI classification for the year of publication was applied. HDI values are available from…”
Section: Populationmentioning
confidence: 99%