Reasons for alcohol use from 1976 to 2020 in the United States among individuals aged 18 to 30: Historical changes and mediation of cohort effects in binge drinking

IF 3 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Alcohol (Hanover, York County, Pa.) Pub Date : 2024-05-25 DOI:10.1111/acer.15323
Katherine M. Keyes, Caroline Rutherford, Megan E. Patrick, Jonathan M. Platt, Deborah D. Kloska, Justin Jager
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Abstract

Background

Alcohol use is declining among US adolescents/early young adults and increasing among other adults, with increases in adult binge drinking more concentrated in females than males. Reasons for drinking are historically patterned by age and sex, and if historically variant, could suggest that changes over time could in part explain age- and sex-differential cohort effects.

Methods

We analyzed longitudinal Monitoring the Future data for individuals born from 1958 to 1990. These individuals were aged 29/30 from 1987 to 2020, and first surveyed at age 18 from 1976 to 2008 (N = 14,190). Five reasons for drinking were analyzed (social, enhancement, avoid problems, relax, boredom). Drinking for social reasons and to relax were most prevalent. Total effects of birth cohort predicting past-2-week binge drinking were estimated with polynomial regression models by age; indirect effects through mediators were estimated.

Results

Drinking reasons exhibited dynamic time trends across birth cohort and sex. Notable increases were observed in social reasons: among women aged 29/30, social reasons increased from 53% to 87% from 1987 to 2020. Social reasons to drink had prominent positive indirect effects at adult ages (age 23/24 and above among men; age 19 and above among women), indicating that binge drinking would have increased less were it not for the increase in social reasons for drinking. Social reasons also mediated adult male/female differences, indicating that part of the reason sex differences are diminishing is the more rapid increases in social reasons for drinking among women. Indirect effects were also observed for drinking to relax and for boredom, and limited indirect effects were observed for enhancement and to avoid problems.

Conclusion

Changing endorsement of drinking reasons, especially social reasons, among US adult drinkers mediate cohort effects in binge drinking in the US adult population and explain in part why binge drinking is converging by sex.

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1976-2020 年美国 18-30 岁人群饮酒的原因:暴饮暴食的历史变化和队列效应的调解。
背景:美国青少年/青壮年的酒精使用率正在下降,而其他成年人的酒精使用率则在上升,成年人酗酒的增加主要集中在女性而非男性身上。饮酒的原因历来以年龄和性别为模式,如果历史上存在差异,则表明随着时间的推移,饮酒原因的变化可以部分解释年龄和性别差异的队列效应:我们分析了 1958 年至 1990 年出生的人的 "监测未来 "纵向数据。这些人在 1987 年至 2020 年期间的年龄为 29/30 岁,在 1976 年至 2008 年期间首次接受调查的年龄为 18 岁(N = 14190)。对饮酒的五种原因进行了分析(社交、提高、避免问题、放松、无聊)。因社交原因和放松而饮酒最为普遍。通过年龄的多项式回归模型估算了出生队列对预测过去两周暴饮的总影响,并估算了通过中介因素产生的间接影响:结果:不同出生组群和性别的饮酒原因呈现出动态的时间趋势。社会原因显著增加:在 29/30 岁的女性中,社会原因从 1987 年的 53% 增加到 2020 年的 87%。饮酒的社会原因在成年后(男性 23/24 岁及以上;女性 19 岁及以上)产生了显著的正向间接影响,表明如果不是因为饮酒的社会原因增加,暴饮暴食的情况会减少。社会原因也是成年男性/女性差异的中介,表明性别差异正在缩小的部分原因是女性饮酒的社会原因增加得更快。此外,还观察到饮酒放松和饮酒解闷的间接影响,以及饮酒增强和饮酒避免问题的有限间接影响:结论:美国成年饮酒者对饮酒原因(尤其是社会原因)的认可程度的变化,对美国成年人口中暴饮暴食的队列效应起到了中介作用,并在一定程度上解释了为什么暴饮暴食会因性别而趋同。
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