Adjusting Alcohol Quantity for Mean Consumption and Intoxication Threshold Improves Prediction of Nonadherence in HIV Patients and HIV‐Negative Controls
Braithwaite RS, Conigliaro J, McGinnis KA, Maisto SA, Bryant K, Justice AC. Adjusting Alcohol Quantity for Mean Consumption and Intoxication Threshold Improves Prediction of Nonadherence in HIV Patients and HIV‐Negative Controls. Alcohol Clinical And Experimental Research 2008, 32: 1645-1651. PMID: 18616666, PMCID: PMC3111093, DOI: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2008.00732.x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsMean daily alcohol consumptionProportion of daysDaily alcohol consumptionSignificant nonadherenceAlcohol consumptionCohort studyTimeline FollowbackVeterans Aging Cohort StudyMedication adherence historyMulti-site cohort studyHIV-negative controlsAging Cohort StudyAlcohol-induced cognitive impairmentCross-sectional analysisNonadherence riskHIV patientsUninfected patientsMedication dosesMedication nonadherencePrescribed medicationsAdherence historyNonadherenceUninfected controlsUsual levelStandard drinks