Aims

To support the free and open dissemination of research findings and information on alcoholism and alcohol-related problems. To encourage open access to peer-reviewed articles free for all to view.

For full versions of posted research articles readers are encouraged to email requests for "electronic reprints" (text file, PDF files, FAX copies) to the corresponding or lead author, who is highlighted in the posting.

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Tuesday, August 21, 2007

ALCOHOL ACROSS THE LIFESPAN


FIVE YEAR STRATEGIC PLAN FY08-13

This document, the NIAAA Strategic Plan for Research, 2008-2013, sets forth research opportunities to increase our understanding of why, how, and when people drink, as well as why and how some people develop alcohol use disorders (AUD). Throughout the years, investigators have pursued answers to these very questions through studies of alcohol’s effects on biological systems, the genetic factors underlying biology, and through the study of environmental and cultural factors. This Plan, however, proposes a significantly different direction for alcohol studies by applying the lifespan perspective -- the consideration of how the emergence and progression of drinking behavior is influenced by multiple changes (in biology, psychology, and in exposure to social and environmental inputs) over a person’s lifetime. These changes occurring throughout the lifespan affect the pattern of drinking (quantity and frequency) and the actions individuals may take to modify their drinking behavior or to seek help for an alcohol use disorder. Viewing alcohol use and alcohol problems through a lifespan perspective will provide knowledge that will, through early identification and intervention, significantly contribute to the ability to decrease the prevalence of alcoholism and other alcohol-related disorders, and to the treatment of these disorders.

This overview describes the origins of the lifespan perspective, highlights the complexity of alcohol issues in health, and provides a view to why solutions to these problems cannot be approached from any single discipline but must be approached in a multidisciplinary and transdisciplinary manner. Further, the findings at any investigative level (molecular, cellular, animal model, human laboratory, human clinical to community) must be translated to other levels and eventually to clinical practice in the world environment. Transdisciplinary and translational research over the course of the next decade will be aided by the intellectual and technical developments arising from the NIH Roadmap and the NIH Neuroscience Blueprint, and their potential application to address health issues related to alcohol use has been integrated into this Plan.

Read Five Year Research Plan

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