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Behavioral Healthcare

STORY OF THE WEEK


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Women Who Drink Beer More Likely to Develop Psoriasis

Regular beer — but not light beer or other types of alcohol — appears to be associated with an increased risk of developing psoriasis, according to a report that will be published in an upcoming issue of Archives of Dermatology.

For other diseases, the type of alcoholic beverage has been shown to influence risk — for instance, beer confers a larger risk for gout than wine or spirits. To evaluate the association between different types of alcohol and psoriasis risk, researchers assessed data from 82,869 women who were 27 to 44 years of age in 1991. The women, participants in the Nurses’ Health Study II, reported the amount and type of alcohol they consumed on biennial questionnaires. They also reported whether they had received a diagnosis of psoriasis.

Through 2005, 1,150 cases of psoriasis developed, 1,069 of which were used for analysis. Compared with women who did not drink alcohol, the risk of psoriasis was 72 percent greater among women who had an average of 2.3 drinks per week or more. When beverages were assessed by type, there was an association between non-light beer drinking and psoriasis, such that women who drank five or more beers per week had a risk for the condition that was 1.8 times higher. Light beer, red wine, white wine and liquor were not associated with psoriasis risk.

When only confirmed psoriasis cases — those in which women provided more details about their condition on a seven-item self-assessment — were considered, the risk for psoriasis was 2.3 times higher for women who drank five or more beers per week than women who did not drink beer.

“Non-light beer was the only alcoholic beverage that increased the risk for psoriasis, suggesting that certain non-alcoholic components of beer, which are not found in wine or liquor, may play an important role in new-onset psoriasis,” the authors write. “One of these components may be the starch source used in making beer. Beer is one of the few non-distilled alcoholic beverages that use a starch source for fermentation, which is commonly barley.” Barley and other starches contain gluten, to which some individuals with psoriasis show a sensitivity. Lower amounts of grain are used to make light beer as compared with non-light beer, potentially explaining why light beer was not associated with psoriasis risk.

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Source: Brigham and Women’s Hospital, August 16, 2010


Three Pillars of Health Coaching: Patient Activation, Motivational Interviewing and Positive Psychology

This resource provides the fundamentals of three essential tools — Patient Activation Measure™, motivational interviewing and positive psychology — that health coaches can use to elicit behavior change, move clients along the path to self-management and have a positive impact on health outcomes and utilization.

Three Pillars of Health Coaching: Patient Activation, Motivational Interviewing and Positive Psychology is available from the Healthcare Intelligence Network for $137 by visiting our Online Bookstore or by calling toll-free (888) 446-3530.




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IMPORTANT NOTICE: This information is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information on the business of healthcare. It is distributed with the understanding that Healthcare Intelligence Network is not engaged in rendering legal advice. If legal advice is required, the services of a competent professional should be retained.



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