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Binge Drinking and Veteran Status Increase Risk for Suicide Planning in U.S. Adults Publisher



Blais RK1 ; Pedersen ER2 ; Brand S3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 ; Xie Z10
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Department of Psychology, Arizona State University, United States
  2. 2. Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, United States
  3. 3. Center for Affective, Stress and Sleep Disturbances, Psychiatric Clinics of the University of Basel, Swaziland
  4. 4. Department of Sport, Exercise, and Health, Division of Sport Science and Psychosocial Health, University of Basel, Swaziland
  5. 5. Department of Medicine, University of Basel, Swaziland
  6. 6. Center for Disaster Psychiatry and Disaster Psychology, Psychiatric Clinics of the University of Basel, Swaziland
  7. 7. Substance Abuse Prevention Research Center, Health Institute, Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences, Iran
  8. 8. Sleep Disorders Research Center, Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences, Iran
  9. 9. School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Iran
  10. 10. Department of Public Health, University of North Florida, United States

Source: Psychology of Addictive Behaviors Published:2025


Abstract

Objective: Suicide is a leading cause of preventable death. Problematic alcohol use and service in the U.S. military confer elevated risk for suicide, yet it is unknown whether their combination further heightens the risk. Extant literature is circumscribed to veterans enrolled in Veterans Affairs care, those with diagnosed alcohol use disorder, or suicide mortality, resulting in notable literature gaps on non-Veterans Affairs-enrolled veterans, nondiagnostic problematic drinking behaviors, and premortality suicide risk. Method: To address these gaps, this study included U.S. adults who participated in the 2015–2020 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, representing 236,723,876 adults. Suicide ideation, planning, and attempt; veteran status; binge drinking, heavy drinking, and demographics were extracted from the cross-sectional self-report survey. Multivariable logistic regression examined suicide ideation, planning, and attempt as a function of veteran status and drinking variables after accounting for relevant demographics. Results: Veterans and nonveterans who reported binge or heavy alcohol use were more likely to report suicide risk. Veterans who engaged in binge drinking episodes were 33% more likely than nonveterans to report any suicide risk. Veteran males who reported binge alcohol use were 38% more likely than nonveteran males to report any suicide outcome. Veterans who reported binge drinking were 72% more likely to report suicide planning without an attempt relative to nonveterans. Conclusions: Efforts to reduce suicide planning among veterans reporting binge drinking are critically needed and present one avenue for reducing the likelihood of a suicide attempt or actual death by suicide. © 2025 American Psychological Association