Abstract Background Results from observational studies suggest that people who drink little or no alcohol are less healthy than medium drinkers. This has been demonstrated for many different measures of health, including sick leave. However, whether these associations are causal or due to confounding remains to be clarified. The aim of this study was to use a discordant twin design to determine whether the increased level of sick leave associated with a low level of alcohol consumption, as compared to those with a medium level of consumption, reflects a causal mechanism or is due to genetic or environmental confounding. Methods Six thousand seven hundred thirty-four young adult twins from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health’s twin pane...
Aims: To examine whether genetic influences on the development of alcohol use disorders (AUD) among ...
This article studies the effect of alcohol consumption on the probability of long-term sickness-rela...
Background: Alcohol-related mortality is more pronounced in lower than in higher socioeconomic group...
AIMS: We examined differences in sickness absence in relation to at-risk drinking and abstinence, ta...
Aim: Earlier research has revealed a strong relationship between alcohol use and sickness absence. T...
Aims To estimate differences in the strength and shape of associations between alcohol use and diagn...
Aims To estimate differences in the strength and shape of associations between alcohol use and diagn...
Little is known about the U-shaped relation between alcohol intake and health beyond findings relate...
Background A moderate to high alcohol consumption is associated with a lower risk of cardiovascular...
Background: While studies have found a social gradient in negative consequences of drinking and smok...
Abstract Background Previous studies have not distinguished between different alcohol-use histories,...
<p><strong>Background:</strong> the aim of this study was to examine the prevalence and socioeconomi...
Background We investigated whether changes in alcohol use predict changes in the risk of sickness ab...
Aims: We examined differences in sickness absence in relation to at-risk drinking and abstinence, ta...
BACKGROUND: Evidence that alcohol consumption is inversely associated with long-term coronary artery...
Aims: To examine whether genetic influences on the development of alcohol use disorders (AUD) among ...
This article studies the effect of alcohol consumption on the probability of long-term sickness-rela...
Background: Alcohol-related mortality is more pronounced in lower than in higher socioeconomic group...
AIMS: We examined differences in sickness absence in relation to at-risk drinking and abstinence, ta...
Aim: Earlier research has revealed a strong relationship between alcohol use and sickness absence. T...
Aims To estimate differences in the strength and shape of associations between alcohol use and diagn...
Aims To estimate differences in the strength and shape of associations between alcohol use and diagn...
Little is known about the U-shaped relation between alcohol intake and health beyond findings relate...
Background A moderate to high alcohol consumption is associated with a lower risk of cardiovascular...
Background: While studies have found a social gradient in negative consequences of drinking and smok...
Abstract Background Previous studies have not distinguished between different alcohol-use histories,...
<p><strong>Background:</strong> the aim of this study was to examine the prevalence and socioeconomi...
Background We investigated whether changes in alcohol use predict changes in the risk of sickness ab...
Aims: We examined differences in sickness absence in relation to at-risk drinking and abstinence, ta...
BACKGROUND: Evidence that alcohol consumption is inversely associated with long-term coronary artery...
Aims: To examine whether genetic influences on the development of alcohol use disorders (AUD) among ...
This article studies the effect of alcohol consumption on the probability of long-term sickness-rela...
Background: Alcohol-related mortality is more pronounced in lower than in higher socioeconomic group...