“…Several studies have found no increase in drinking related to stressful life events (Droomers, Schrijvers, Stronks, Van De Mheen, & Mackenbach, 1999;Robertson, Xu, & Stripling, 2010;Welte & Mirand, 1995), social anxiety (Eggleson, Woolaway-Bickel, & Schmidt, 2004;Ham & Hope, 2006;Tran, Haaga, & Chambless, 1997) and posttraumatic stress disorder (Boscarino et al, 2006;Breslau, Davis, & Schultz, 2003;Najdowski & Ullman, 2009), and there are also studies reporting no drinking increase in people who have suffered pain (Yokoyama et al, 2009), sexual victimization (Testa, Livingston, & Hoffman, 2007) and effects of military combat (Fritch, Mishkind, Reger, & Gahm, 2010). Workrelated stress has a particularly uncertain relationship with drinking; sometimes distressed employees drink more (Ahola et al, 2006;Bobak et al, 2005;Richman, Shinsako, Rospenda, Flaherty, & Freels, 2002) and sometimes they do not (Hodgins, Williams, & Munro, 2009;Kouvonen et al, 2005;Ng & Jeffery, 2003).…”