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Focus On: Women and the Costs of Alcohol Use
Even though the prevalence of alcohol use in the United States generally is lower among women compared with men (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration [SAMHSA] 2011), this gap has narrowed (Grucza et al. 2008). Furthermore, although women consume alcohol at lower levels than men, their body composition puts them at higher risk than men of developing some alcohol-related...
Introduction
Although historically cisgender women (i.e., women whose sex assigned at birth is consonant with their gender) in the United States have had lower levels of alcohol consumption than cisgender men, recent analyses of historical and cohort data suggest that overall gender differences are narrowing.1 This narrowing is largely due to substantial increases in cisgender women's alcohol use...
Gender Differences in the Epidemiology of Alcohol Use and Related Harms in the United States
Sex Differences in the Neurobiology of Alcohol Use Disorder
Maternal Substance Use: Consequences, Identification, and Interventions
The Endocrine System and Alcohol Drinking in Females
The prevalence of alcohol use and the contrast between the drinking patterns of men and women vary widely across the globe. For instance, rates of current drinking ranged from 3 percent and 37 percent for women and men, respectively, in the Indian state of Karnataka to 94 percent and 97 percent for women and men in Denmark (Wilsnack et al. 2009). Overall, however, men have higher rates of alcohol...
Sex and Gender Effects in Recovery from Alcohol Use Disorder
Gender Differences in Binge Drinking