R. Caetano et J. Schafer, DSM-IV ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE IN A TREATMENT SAMPLE OF WHITE, BLACK, AND MEXICAN-AMERICAN MEN, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research, 20(2), 1996, pp. 384-390
This study examines the presentation, correlates, and factor structure
of DSM-IV alcohol dependence among 256 White, 263 Black, and 212 Mexi
can-American men admitted consecutively to five alcohol treatment prog
rams in San Jose, CA. Interviews of similar to 1 hr were conducted, in
the programs' facilities by trained interviewers using a standardized
questionnaire. The response rate was 87%. Results show that the propo
rtion of Black respondents who are alcohol-dependent according to the
DSM-IV criteria is lower (63%) than the proportion of Whites (86%) and
Mexican Americans (76%). However, the proportion of respondents repor
ting each criterion of dependence was similar across groups. The most
powerful predictor of the number of dependence indicators reported by
respondents was level of alcohol consumption, independent of ethnicity
. A unidimensional model of dependence combining all seven indicators
of DSM-IV alcohol dependence fit well across men in all three ethnic g
roups. These results indicate that both the presentation and factorial
structure of DSM-IV alcohol dependence were uniform across White, Bla
ck and Mexican-American men in treatment for alcohol problems.