THIS is exactly the kind of thing that the Demoncrats are famous for: Wasting tax dollars on endless "studies" in the vain hope that they can find some justification for queerism, thus forcing Normal people to feel sorry for them and accept their perverted lifestyle choice. 
The booze isn't the problem. Wantonly engaging in perverted practices that deeply offend God is the problem. The cure is a bucket of Christ's cleansing blood. I'm glad that I don't pay any taxes (thank you Jesus for making me a tax-exempt True Christian(pm) Pastor!), but if I did, I'm sure my outrage would be even greater.

$3M NIH grant to UIC to study lesbian drinking
CHICAGO (STNG) -- The UIC College of Nursing has received a $3 million federal grant to continue research to identify risk factors for excessive drinking among lesbians.
The five-year study, led by Tonda Hughes, professor of health systems science, will examine how stressful experiences -- childhood sexual abuse, adult sexual assault and discrimination based on ethnicity or sexual orientation -- are related to psychological harm and hazardous drinking in adult women, a release from UIC said.
Data will be collected from a diverse sample of 384 adult lesbians in the area who were previously interviewed by Hughes and her research team in 2000 and 2004. Another 250 new subjects -- 18 to 25 years old and of African-American and Hispanic descent -- will also be interviewed.
The results of the study, Hughes said, will be used to understand how women cope with stress. The group will be compared with heterosexual urban and suburban women in the National Study of Health and Life Experiences of Women, a 20-year longitudinal study of more than 1,600 women.
The findings may help develop more effective alcohol abuse prevention and intervention strategies, Hughes said.
She has researched lesbian health issues for more than 20 years. In 1999, she initiated the first phase of the research in a study of drinking behavior among nearly 450 lesbians.
"Myths and stereotypes of lesbians as alcoholics and heavy drinkers are largely based on studies conducted in the 1970s that recruited most of their samples from gay bars," Hughes said. "Our research is designed to provide a much more realistic picture of the patterns and variability of lesbians' drinking."
In 2002, Hughes launched the second phase of the research, believed to be the first-ever longitudinal study of lesbian health. Follow-up interviews were conducted four years later to learn how the subjects' drinking patterns had changed and what factors had influenced those changes.
The new study, combined with the 2000 and 2004 surveys, will provide the most comprehensive data yet available on the characteristics and determinants of hazardous drinking among lesbians, Hughes said.
The grant is funded by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, one of the National Institutes of Health.
CHICAGO (STNG) -- The UIC College of Nursing has received a $3 million federal grant to continue research to identify risk factors for excessive drinking among lesbians.
The five-year study, led by Tonda Hughes, professor of health systems science, will examine how stressful experiences -- childhood sexual abuse, adult sexual assault and discrimination based on ethnicity or sexual orientation -- are related to psychological harm and hazardous drinking in adult women, a release from UIC said.
Data will be collected from a diverse sample of 384 adult lesbians in the area who were previously interviewed by Hughes and her research team in 2000 and 2004. Another 250 new subjects -- 18 to 25 years old and of African-American and Hispanic descent -- will also be interviewed.
The results of the study, Hughes said, will be used to understand how women cope with stress. The group will be compared with heterosexual urban and suburban women in the National Study of Health and Life Experiences of Women, a 20-year longitudinal study of more than 1,600 women.
The findings may help develop more effective alcohol abuse prevention and intervention strategies, Hughes said.
She has researched lesbian health issues for more than 20 years. In 1999, she initiated the first phase of the research in a study of drinking behavior among nearly 450 lesbians.
"Myths and stereotypes of lesbians as alcoholics and heavy drinkers are largely based on studies conducted in the 1970s that recruited most of their samples from gay bars," Hughes said. "Our research is designed to provide a much more realistic picture of the patterns and variability of lesbians' drinking."
In 2002, Hughes launched the second phase of the research, believed to be the first-ever longitudinal study of lesbian health. Follow-up interviews were conducted four years later to learn how the subjects' drinking patterns had changed and what factors had influenced those changes.
The new study, combined with the 2000 and 2004 surveys, will provide the most comprehensive data yet available on the characteristics and determinants of hazardous drinking among lesbians, Hughes said.
The grant is funded by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, one of the National Institutes of Health.






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