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The alcohol hangover research group consensus statement on best practice in alcohol hangover research

The alcohol hangover research group consensus statement on best practice in alcohol hangover research
The alcohol hangover research group consensus statement on best practice in alcohol hangover research

Alcohol-induced hangover, defined by a series of symptoms, is the most commonly reported consequence of excessive alcohol consumption. Alcohol hangovers contribute to workplace absenteeism, impaired job performance, reduced productivity, poor academic achievement, and may compromise potentially dangerous daily activities such as driving a car or operating heavy machinery. These socioeconomic consequences and health risks of alcohol hangover are much higher when compared to various common diseases and other health risk factors. Nevertheless, unlike alcohol intoxication the hangover has received very little scientific attention and studies have often yielded inconclusive results. Systematic research is important to increase our knowledge on alcohol hangover and its consequences. This consensus paper of the Alcohol Hangover Research Group discusses methodological issues that should be taken into account when performing future alcohol hangover research. Future research should aim to (1) further determine the pathology of alcohol hangover, (2) examine the role of genetics, (3) determine the economic costs of alcohol hangover, (4) examine sex and age differences, (5) develop common research tools and methodologies to study hangover effects, (6) focus on factor that aggravate hangover severity (e.g., congeners), and (7) develop effective hangover remedies.

Alcohol hangover, Guidelines, Methodology, Research
1874-4737
116-126
Howland, Jonathan
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Young, Mark
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Smith, Gordon
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Slutske, Wendy S.
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Reed, Nick
d4e42d95-2a16-446f-813f-b620a230c149
Prat, Gemma
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Parkes, Andrew
287c83f8-6956-4f23-94c9-9757e6b1c1d0
Oudelaar, Marieke
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van Nuland, Merel
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Murphy, René J.L.
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McGregor, Neil
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Ling, Jonathan
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Kruisselbrink, L. D.
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Kim, Dai Jin
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Verster, Joris C.
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Heffernan, Thomas
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Fliervoet, Lies A.L.
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Batty, G. D.
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Adan, Ana
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Piasecki, Thomas M.
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Finnigan, Frances
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McKinney, Adele
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Levy, Dan
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McGeary, John
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Rohsenow, Damaris
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Penning, Renske
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Stephens, Richard
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Howland, Jonathan
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Young, Mark
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Smith, Gordon
8bbc7cee-757a-4f2d-a47c-35cedc54ff40
Slutske, Wendy S.
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Reed, Nick
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Prat, Gemma
f756407a-8de6-4a82-ac14-a40fc32db27e
Parkes, Andrew
287c83f8-6956-4f23-94c9-9757e6b1c1d0
Oudelaar, Marieke
9396c0d7-6345-4047-aa23-138d45f00a94
van Nuland, Merel
77c6f1dc-7481-4430-905c-4c0c9de95be3
Murphy, René J.L.
a40080df-4303-4802-b718-cbdead40889b
McGregor, Neil
bbf6e23f-0d61-45cb-a87d-6b17656fe33e
Ling, Jonathan
97c69abe-a608-479f-87d8-07146e116ef4
Kruisselbrink, L. D.
553600bf-bc42-46fa-80fd-bf688541decd
Kim, Dai Jin
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Verster, Joris C.
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Heffernan, Thomas
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Fliervoet, Lies A.L.
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Batty, G. D.
b9f925eb-88c8-4f27-8148-8929fdb84149
Adan, Ana
54235e3f-6515-426c-9e9c-f49d08521a42
Piasecki, Thomas M.
021500c6-d1cb-4353-809f-e3e9212f71ef
Finnigan, Frances
0fe659e8-a883-4996-9780-9538d5ef515c
McKinney, Adele
7bf46111-e1c3-4dac-bc73-fc7728277c44
Levy, Dan
edf9766f-63bc-4f2d-bb77-9620a65e2da3
McGeary, John
83a01327-247a-4283-ab15-b3fc5e958fa5
Rohsenow, Damaris
2d8e3dab-b45b-4b23-9c7f-1650f7be19cf
Penning, Renske
fd08b81e-e43d-45dc-a7d7-5aa0b7ce44c3
Stephens, Richard
fd5906e4-8b8e-465c-b5c2-55e1f884492f

Howland, Jonathan, Young, Mark, Smith, Gordon, Slutske, Wendy S., Reed, Nick, Prat, Gemma, Parkes, Andrew, Oudelaar, Marieke, van Nuland, Merel, Murphy, René J.L., McGregor, Neil, Ling, Jonathan, Kruisselbrink, L. D., Kim, Dai Jin, Verster, Joris C., Heffernan, Thomas, Fliervoet, Lies A.L., Batty, G. D., Adan, Ana, Piasecki, Thomas M., Finnigan, Frances, McKinney, Adele, Levy, Dan, McGeary, John, Rohsenow, Damaris, Penning, Renske and Stephens, Richard (2010) The alcohol hangover research group consensus statement on best practice in alcohol hangover research. Current Drug Abuse Reviews, 3 (2), 116-126. (doi:10.2174/1874473711003020116).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Alcohol-induced hangover, defined by a series of symptoms, is the most commonly reported consequence of excessive alcohol consumption. Alcohol hangovers contribute to workplace absenteeism, impaired job performance, reduced productivity, poor academic achievement, and may compromise potentially dangerous daily activities such as driving a car or operating heavy machinery. These socioeconomic consequences and health risks of alcohol hangover are much higher when compared to various common diseases and other health risk factors. Nevertheless, unlike alcohol intoxication the hangover has received very little scientific attention and studies have often yielded inconclusive results. Systematic research is important to increase our knowledge on alcohol hangover and its consequences. This consensus paper of the Alcohol Hangover Research Group discusses methodological issues that should be taken into account when performing future alcohol hangover research. Future research should aim to (1) further determine the pathology of alcohol hangover, (2) examine the role of genetics, (3) determine the economic costs of alcohol hangover, (4) examine sex and age differences, (5) develop common research tools and methodologies to study hangover effects, (6) focus on factor that aggravate hangover severity (e.g., congeners), and (7) develop effective hangover remedies.

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More information

Published date: 2010
Keywords: Alcohol hangover, Guidelines, Methodology, Research

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480046
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480046
ISSN: 1874-4737
PURE UUID: e71b71bb-dc59-4faa-979a-436133205715
ORCID for Mark Young: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0001-2594-453X

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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 16:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20

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Contributors

Author: Jonathan Howland
Author: Mark Young ORCID iD
Author: Gordon Smith
Author: Wendy S. Slutske
Author: Nick Reed
Author: Gemma Prat
Author: Andrew Parkes
Author: Marieke Oudelaar
Author: Merel van Nuland
Author: René J.L. Murphy
Author: Neil McGregor
Author: Jonathan Ling
Author: L. D. Kruisselbrink
Author: Dai Jin Kim
Author: Joris C. Verster
Author: Thomas Heffernan
Author: Lies A.L. Fliervoet
Author: G. D. Batty
Author: Ana Adan
Author: Thomas M. Piasecki
Author: Frances Finnigan
Author: Adele McKinney
Author: Dan Levy
Author: John McGeary
Author: Damaris Rohsenow
Author: Renske Penning
Author: Richard Stephens

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