Functional Alcoholism


I recently "outed" myself to some new folks, mostly friends from the past. Some were shocked by my revelation that I am an alcoholic. 

One friend even burst out : "YOU ARE NOT!" 

I was inspired to find the article below about the 5 types of alcoholism. I think these types are going into the next DSM-V.

I'm in the "Functional Category".
Just so you know, you don't have to be a skid row bum to be an alcoholic. You don't even have to drink daily or a 5th a day. Some of us drank 3-4 drinks a day, or less, or binged once every six months.  Not that I'm "recruiting" or anything. :-)
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Dispelling the myth of the "typical alcoholic," National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism researchers have identified five subtypes of alcoholics from a study of 1,484 people who met diagnostic criteria for alcohol dependence.
The study found that the largest group of alcoholics in the U.S. are young adults. Twenty percent are highly functional and more than half do not have a family history of alcoholism. The study was conducted by Howard B. Moss, M.D., NIAAA associate director for clinical and translational research, and a team of researchers. The study drew from responses to the National Epidemiological Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions, a representative epidemiological study of alcohol, drug, and mental disorders in the United States.

Types of Alcoholics

The NIAAA researchers defined five subtypes of alcoholics by the following specific characteristics. They also listed the percentage of each type that composes the total number of U.S. alcoholics:

Young Adult Alcoholics

  • 31.5 percent.
  • Young adult drinkers, with relatively low rates of co-occurring substance abuse and mental disorders.
  • Low rates of family alcoholism.
  • Rarely seek any kind of help for their drinking.

Young Antisocial Alcoholics

Functional Alcoholics

Intermediate Familial Alcoholics

Chronic Severe Alcoholics

Previous studies which tried to identify alcoholism subtypes were conducted with people who were in treatment for their alcoholism. Therefore, a large percentage of alcoholics were left out of those studies, because only about one-fourth of alcoholics ever seek treatment.

By Buddy T,





.