Alcohol Research Group

  • Research
    • Overview
    • Disparities
    • Environment
    • Epidemiology
    • Health
    • International
    • Methodology
    • Policy
    • Treatment & Recovery
    • Intervention Trials
  • The Center
    • About
          • ABOUT THE CENTER

            • History, Mission, & Focus
          • MEET THE DIRECTOR


            Senior Scientist, William (Bill) C. Kerr, PhD, is Director of ARG’s National Alcohol Research Center and Co-Directs the National Alcohol Survey and the Health Disparities projects.  Bill also serves as the scientific director at ARG and continues to lead R01 projects, including a grant to investigate secondhand harms from alcohol and other drugs.

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    • People
          • THE CENTER TEAM

            • Center Leadership
            • Scientific Advisory Board
            • Research Partners
          • MEET THE ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR

            Scientist Nina Mulia, DrPH, is Center Associate Director and Director of the Alcohol Services project. She specializes in and has published widely on race and ethnicity and socioeconomic disparities in heavy drinking, alcohol problems, and alcohol services utilization.

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    • Research
          • CENTER RESEARCH

            • Cores
            • Research Projects
            • Affiliated Research
          • ASSESSING HID OVER THE LIFECOURSE

            This project, led by Camillia Lui, PhD, traces trends in harmful drinking patterns over a 40-year period, and identifies a range of alcohol-related precursors and problems through event-based and population-based approaches to inform early screening and interventions for high-risk groups.

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    • National Alcohol Surveys
          • ABOUT THE SURVEY

            • About the National Alcohol Survey
            • NAS Datasets
            • Get Access to the NAS data
          • MEET THE SURVEY CO-DIRECTOR

            Scientist and Deputy Scientific Director, Priscilla Martinez, oversees the survey design, data collection, and analyses.  In the latest cycle of the NAS, Priscilla conducted dried blood spot sampling to help better understand the relationship between how our immune systems work and what role they might play in how alcohol use can affect our mental health.

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  • Training Program
        • OVERVIEW

          • About the Training Program
          • Predoctoral Fellowship
          • Postdoctoral Fellowship
          • Seminars
        • APPLY NOW

          • Predoctoral Fellowship Application
          • Postdoctoral Fellowship Application
        • TRAINING STAFF

          • Faculty & Mentors
          • Current Fellows
  • Impacts
    • New Findings
    • In the News
    • Press Release
    • Publications
  • Data & Resources
    • Datasets
  • About
    • History
    • Mission, Vision, Values & Goals
    • Governance
    • Staff
    • Library
    • Employment
    • Support ARG
  • Donate

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About the Center

 

The Alcohol Research Group (ARG) is a multidisciplinary research center whose focus is to conduct research on alcohol use patterns and associated problems and disseminate research findings. Our research team is comprised of epidemiologists, psychologists, economists and researchers in other disciplines.

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Focus on Disparities

National Alcohol Research Center: Epidemiology of Alcohol Problems

 

Alcohol-related disparities are the unifying focus of our Center. We recognize the rising economic inequality in the US, the increasing disparities in alcohol-related problems, health and other outcomes, and the considerable gaps in knowledge.

To address these issues, our work seeks to increase understanding of contributing changes and factors which could inform future programmatic and policy efforts to improve the physical and mental health of individuals and reduce the societal harms and related costs to communities.

OBJECTIVES

 

1.) To conduct critically needed research in alcohol epidemiology, gathering information over time about the prevalence, incidence, etiology, mediators and moderators of disparities in drinking patterns and alcohol problems, focusing particularly on subgroups defined by gender, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status and sexual and gender minority status and utilizing cutting edge methods for applied research.

2.) To address issues informing the development of drinking interventions and alcohol and health policy decisions related to disparities in alcohol problems and health disparities in alcohol-related causes.

3.) To develop resources for the study of disparities including surveys, data, measures, analytic methods and geographic linkages and perspectives needed to analyze individual-level, alcohol intake and services, and environmental data in new ways that advance methods and test key hypotheses.

4.) To disseminate research on alcohol-related risks and alcohol-related disparities and to develop best practices for translation of research findings to disadvantaged populations.

5.) To promote a richly interactive scientific environment for disparities research through a research-enabling infrastructure with unique opportunities for multi-disciplinary training and career development, especially for early career and minority investigators, and to maintain existing and develop new strategic research partnerships with universities, non-profits and other groups

The Epidemiology of Alcohol Problems: Alcohol-Related Disparities Center has a 40-year history of making important contributions to public health, alcohol epidemiology and disparities research.

In 1977, ARG received its first National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) grant to establish the National Alcohol Research Center. The Center emphasizes our primary interest in alcohol-related issues and other substances such as tobacco, cannabis and opioids and applies these interests to a broad range of health and mental health outcomes. Over the past 45 years, the Center has trained scientists, completed over 153 studies, supported 137 affiliated projects, and conducted a long series of National Alcohol Surveys every five years since 1979.

Training Program

ARG houses a highly successful NIAAA T32 Training Program in Alcohol Epidemiology for a diverse, multi-disciplinary group of pre- and postdoctoral fellows mentored by a productive grant-experienced faculty. Our integrated and productive research environment facilitates a successful next phase of the Center, moving science forward ARG operates a highly successful NIAAA-funded T32 Training Program since 1971 through UC Berkeley. Focused on the social epidemiology of alcohol problems and alcohol-related health services, our program has attracted many fellows with strong interests in disparities related to race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and sexual minority status. Learn more.

Who We Are

About ARG

We are a non-profit research organization that seeks to improve public health through deepening our understanding of alcohol and other drug use and investigating innovative approaches to reduce its consequences for individuals, families, and communities.

  • Land Acknowledgement
  • History
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What We Do

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  • Research Overview
  • National Alcohol Research Center
  • Methodology
  • Training

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