TY - JOUR
T1 - The dimensionality of alcohol use disorders
T2 - Results from Israel
AU - Shmulewitz, Dvora
AU - Keyes, Katherine
AU - Beseler, Cheryl
AU - Aharonovich, Efrat
AU - Aivadyan, Christina
AU - Spivak, Baruch
AU - Hasin, Deborah
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded by NIH grants R01AA013654 , R01DA018652 , K05AA014223 (Hasin), F31DA026689 (Keyes), K23DA016743 (Aharonovich), and the New York State Psychiatric Institute (Hasin). Neither the NIH nor the NYSPI had any further role in study design; in the collection, analysis and interpretation of data; in the writing of the report; or in the decision to submit the paper for publication.
PY - 2010/9
Y1 - 2010/9
N2 - Aims: To prepare for DSM-V, the structure of DSM-IV alcohol dependence and abuse criteria and a proposed additional criterion, at-risk drinking, require study in countries with low per-capita consumption, and comparison of current and lifetime results within the same sample. We investigated DSM-IV Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) criteria in Israel, where per-capita alcohol consumption is low. Methods: Household residents selected from the Israeli population register (N=1338) were interviewed with the AUDADIS. Item response theory analyses were conducted using MPlus, and diagnostic thresholds were examined with the kappa statistic. Results: Dependence and abuse criteria fit a unidimensional model interspersed across the severity continuum, for both current and lifetime timeframes. Legal problems were rare and did not improve model fit. Weekly at-risk drinking reflected greater severity than in U.S. samples. When dependence and abuse criteria were combined, a diagnostic threshold of ≥3 criteria produced the best agreement with DSM-IV diagnoses (kappa>0.80). Conclusion: Consistent with other studies, alcohol dependence and abuse criteria reflected a latent variable representing a single AUD. Results suggested little effect in removing legal problems and little gained by adding weekly at-risk drinking. Results contribute to knowledge about AUD criteria by examining them in a low-consumption country.
AB - Aims: To prepare for DSM-V, the structure of DSM-IV alcohol dependence and abuse criteria and a proposed additional criterion, at-risk drinking, require study in countries with low per-capita consumption, and comparison of current and lifetime results within the same sample. We investigated DSM-IV Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) criteria in Israel, where per-capita alcohol consumption is low. Methods: Household residents selected from the Israeli population register (N=1338) were interviewed with the AUDADIS. Item response theory analyses were conducted using MPlus, and diagnostic thresholds were examined with the kappa statistic. Results: Dependence and abuse criteria fit a unidimensional model interspersed across the severity continuum, for both current and lifetime timeframes. Legal problems were rare and did not improve model fit. Weekly at-risk drinking reflected greater severity than in U.S. samples. When dependence and abuse criteria were combined, a diagnostic threshold of ≥3 criteria produced the best agreement with DSM-IV diagnoses (kappa>0.80). Conclusion: Consistent with other studies, alcohol dependence and abuse criteria reflected a latent variable representing a single AUD. Results suggested little effect in removing legal problems and little gained by adding weekly at-risk drinking. Results contribute to knowledge about AUD criteria by examining them in a low-consumption country.
KW - Alcohol dependence
KW - Alcohol use disorders
KW - DSM-IV
KW - DSM-V
KW - Israel
KW - Item response theory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77956182995&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2010.04.002
DO - 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2010.04.002
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C2 - 20537809
AN - SCOPUS:77956182995
SN - 0376-8716
VL - 111
SP - 146
EP - 154
JO - Drug and Alcohol Dependence
JF - Drug and Alcohol Dependence
IS - 1-2
ER -