Richard W Wilsnack
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Explore the profile of Richard W Wilsnack including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
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13
Citations
506
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Recent Articles
1.
Wilsnack S, Wilsnack R, Hiller-Sturmhofel S
Alcohol Health Res World
. 2019 Dec;
18(3):173-181.
PMID: 31798134
More than 50 percent of women in the United States drink alcohol. In general, they abstain more and drink less frequently than men. Women's drinking behavior is determined by demographic...
2.
Wilsnack R, Kristjanson A, Wilsnack S, Bloomfield K, Grittner U, Crosby R
Int J Alcohol Drug Res
. 2019 Feb;
7(2):30-36.
PMID: 30740189
Aims: Multinational studies of drinking and the harms it may cause typically treat countries as homogeneous. Neglecting variation within countries may lead to inaccurate conclusions about drinking behavior, and particularly...
3.
Tedor M, Quinn L, Wilsnack S, Wilsnack R, Greenfield T
Deviant Behav
. 2019 Jan;
39(12):1578-1599.
PMID: 30662102
Using comparable survey data from the GENACIS Project, collected from representative samples of people aged 20 to 70 years old in the U.S. (=2,598) and Japan (=1,734), this study examined,...
4.
Wilsnack R, Wilsnack S, Gmel G, Kantor L
Alcohol Res
. 2018 Dec;
39(1):57-76.
PMID: 30557149
Just as binge drinking rates differ for men and women, the predictors and consequences of binge drinking vary by gender as well. This article examines these differences and how binge...
5.
Tedor M, Quinn L, Wilsnack S, Wilsnack R, Greenfield T
Deviant Behav
. 2018 May;
39(5):554-575.
PMID: 29805188
Alcohol use is associated with a higher rate of violent offending among males and a higher rate of violent victimization among females, especially for Intimate Partner Violence (IPV). Using comparable...
6.
Wilsnack R, Wilsnack S
Menopause
. 2016 Mar;
23(4):458-60.
PMID: 27028261
Clinicians should periodically assess their menopausal patients' alcohol use. Specific health hazards from excessive alcohol consumption, as well as potential benefits of low-level consumption (for cardiovascular disease, bone health, and...
7.
Wilsnack S, Wilsnack R, Kantor L
Alcohol Res
. 2014 Jun;
35(2):219-28.
PMID: 24881330
Although light-to-moderate drinking among women is associated with reduced risks of some cardiovascular problems, strokes, and weakening of bones, such levels of drinking also are associated with increased risks of...
8.
Peng C, Wilsnack R, Kristjanson A, Benson P, Wilsnack S
Drug Alcohol Depend
. 2012 Jan;
124(1-2):50-6.
PMID: 22236536
Background: Most gender-specific studies of the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) have focused on gender differences in thresholds for hazardous drinking. This study examines gender differences in the factor...
9.
Wilsnack R, Wilsnack S, Kristjanson A, Vogeltanz-Holm N, Gmel G
Addiction
. 2009 Aug;
104(9):1487-500.
PMID: 19686518
Aims: To evaluate multinational patterns of gender- and age-specific alcohol consumption. Design And Participants: Large general-population surveys of men's and women's drinking behavior (n's > 900) in 35 countries in...
10.
Wilsnack R, Kristjanson A, Wilsnack S, Crosby R
J Stud Alcohol
. 2006 Apr;
67(3):341-8.
PMID: 16608142
Objective: Women's alcohol consumption in the United States has aroused increased public concern, despite a scarcity of evidence of any major increases in women's drinking. To help resolve this apparent...