Psychosocial Measures of Alcohol Consumption --;Just the Facts: Enhancing Measurement of Alcohol Consumption Using Self-Report Methods --;Computerized Approaches to Alcohol Assessment --;Timeline Follow-Back: A Technique for Assessing Self-Reported Alcohol Consumption --;Using Subject and Collateral Reports to Measure Alcohol Consumption --;Biochemical Measures of Alcohol Consumption --;An Overview of Current and Emerging Markers of Alcoholism --;Blood and Liver Markers in the Estimation of Alcohol Consumption --;Carbohydrate-Deficient Transferrin and 5-Hydroxytryptophol: Two New Markers of High Alcohol Consumption --;Protein-Acetaldehyde Adducts as Biochemical Markers of Alcohol Consumption --;Measuring Alcohol Consumption by Transdermal Dosimetry --;Assessment of Ethanol Consumption with a Wearable, Electronic Ethanol Sensor/Recorder --;Summary --;Measures of Alcohol Consumption in Perspective.
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
The Importance of Measuring Alcohol Consumption To date, alcohol studies have attended far more to issues of alco- hol dependence and the harmful consequences of drinking than to the level of alcohol consumption itself.
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Alcohol -- Physiological effect -- Congresses.
Alcoholism -- Diagnosis -- Research -- Methodology -- Congresses.
Drinking of alcoholic beverages -- Research -- Methodology -- Congresses.