The GENACIS project: a review of findings and some implications for global needs in women-focused substance abuse prevention and intervention

Sharon C WilsnackDepartment of Clinical Neuroscience, University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Grand Forks, ND, USAAbstract: Gender, Alcohol, and Culture: An International Study (GENACIS) is a collaborative study of gender-related and cultural influences on alcohol use and...

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Main Author: Wilsnack SC
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2012-02-01
Series:Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation
Online Access:http://www.dovepress.com/the-genacis-project-a-review-of-findings-and-some-implications-for-glo-a9171
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spelling doaj-2ec6882851b64f0dab755aaa18fb35f72020-11-24T22:43:25ZengDove Medical PressSubstance Abuse and Rehabilitation1179-84672012-02-012012Supplement 1515The GENACIS project: a review of findings and some implications for global needs in women-focused substance abuse prevention and interventionWilsnack SCSharon C WilsnackDepartment of Clinical Neuroscience, University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Grand Forks, ND, USAAbstract: Gender, Alcohol, and Culture: An International Study (GENACIS) is a collaborative study of gender-related and cultural influences on alcohol use and alcohol-related problems of women and men. Members conduct comparative analyses of data from comparable general population surveys in 38 countries on five continents. This paper presents GENACIS findings that (1) age-related declines in drinking are uncommon outside North America and Europe; (2) groups of women at increased risk for hazardous drinking include women who cohabit, women with fewer social roles, more highly educated women in lower-income countries, and sexual minority women in North America; (3) heavier alcohol use shows strong and cross-culturally consistent associations with increased likelihood and severity of intimate partner violence; and (4) one effect or accompaniment of rapid social, economic, and gender-role change in traditional societies may be increased drinking among formerly abstinent women. These findings have potentially important implications for women-focused intervention and policy. Substance abuse services should include attention to middle-aged and older women, who may have different risk factors, symptoms, and treatment issues than their younger counterparts. Creative, targeted prevention is needed for high-risk groups of women. Programs to reduce violence between intimate partners must include attention to the pervasive role of alcohol use in intimate partner aggression. Social and economic empowerment of women, together with social marketing of norms of abstention or low-risk drinking, may help prevent increased hazardous alcohol use among women in countries undergoing rapid social change. Greater attention to effects of gender, culture, and their interactions can inform the design of more effective prevention, intervention, and policy to reduce the substantial global costs of alcohol abuse in both women and men.Keywords: GENACIS, women, alcohol, substance abuse, international, intervention, preventionhttp://www.dovepress.com/the-genacis-project-a-review-of-findings-and-some-implications-for-glo-a9171
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
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author Wilsnack SC
spellingShingle Wilsnack SC
The GENACIS project: a review of findings and some implications for global needs in women-focused substance abuse prevention and intervention
Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation
author_facet Wilsnack SC
author_sort Wilsnack SC
title The GENACIS project: a review of findings and some implications for global needs in women-focused substance abuse prevention and intervention
title_short The GENACIS project: a review of findings and some implications for global needs in women-focused substance abuse prevention and intervention
title_full The GENACIS project: a review of findings and some implications for global needs in women-focused substance abuse prevention and intervention
title_fullStr The GENACIS project: a review of findings and some implications for global needs in women-focused substance abuse prevention and intervention
title_full_unstemmed The GENACIS project: a review of findings and some implications for global needs in women-focused substance abuse prevention and intervention
title_sort genacis project: a review of findings and some implications for global needs in women-focused substance abuse prevention and intervention
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation
issn 1179-8467
publishDate 2012-02-01
description Sharon C WilsnackDepartment of Clinical Neuroscience, University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Grand Forks, ND, USAAbstract: Gender, Alcohol, and Culture: An International Study (GENACIS) is a collaborative study of gender-related and cultural influences on alcohol use and alcohol-related problems of women and men. Members conduct comparative analyses of data from comparable general population surveys in 38 countries on five continents. This paper presents GENACIS findings that (1) age-related declines in drinking are uncommon outside North America and Europe; (2) groups of women at increased risk for hazardous drinking include women who cohabit, women with fewer social roles, more highly educated women in lower-income countries, and sexual minority women in North America; (3) heavier alcohol use shows strong and cross-culturally consistent associations with increased likelihood and severity of intimate partner violence; and (4) one effect or accompaniment of rapid social, economic, and gender-role change in traditional societies may be increased drinking among formerly abstinent women. These findings have potentially important implications for women-focused intervention and policy. Substance abuse services should include attention to middle-aged and older women, who may have different risk factors, symptoms, and treatment issues than their younger counterparts. Creative, targeted prevention is needed for high-risk groups of women. Programs to reduce violence between intimate partners must include attention to the pervasive role of alcohol use in intimate partner aggression. Social and economic empowerment of women, together with social marketing of norms of abstention or low-risk drinking, may help prevent increased hazardous alcohol use among women in countries undergoing rapid social change. Greater attention to effects of gender, culture, and their interactions can inform the design of more effective prevention, intervention, and policy to reduce the substantial global costs of alcohol abuse in both women and men.Keywords: GENACIS, women, alcohol, substance abuse, international, intervention, prevention
url http://www.dovepress.com/the-genacis-project-a-review-of-findings-and-some-implications-for-glo-a9171
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