Characteristics of non-drinking and drinking adults in Taiwan and their implications in alcohol epidemiological studies.

IF 2.6 3区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES PLoS ONE Pub Date : 2025-04-01 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0320451
Tsung Yu, Tzu-Jung Wong, Hsing-Yu Yang
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Abstract

Background: Confounding is a major threat to causal inferences regarding alcohol and health. One proposed causal inference approach was to compare the associations obtained from cohorts in different countries, where we know the confounding structures are different. To explore the confounding structure related to alcohol and health in Taiwan, we compared differences in the characteristics of drinkers and non-drinkers, using data from the Nutrition and Health Survey in Taiwan (2013-2016).

Methods: The cross-sectional survey data were collected nationwide and were representative of residents in Taiwan, which included 2,846 men and 2,833 women ages 19 years and older. We used information regarding alcohol drinking and covariates of sociodemographic and health behavior variables. We performed sex-stratified multinomial logistic regression to assess the associations between each independent variable and alcohol drinking (non-drinkers, occasional drinkers, and moderate drinkers).

Results: Among men, 31% were non-drinkers, 7% former drinkers, 43% occasional drinkers, 13% moderate drinkers, and 5% heavy drinkers. Among women, 62% were non-drinkers, 1% former drinkers, 32% occasional drinkers, 4% moderate drinkers, and 1% heavy drinkers. In both men and women, occasional drinkers had higher educational levels and fewer family financial problems, but had more smoking and betel nut chewing behaviors than non-drinkers, after we adjusted for age. Moderate drinkers had even more smoking and betel nut chewing behaviors. Male moderate drinkers also reported more comorbidities than non-drinkers.

Conclusions: We observed that occasional drinkers had a better socioeconomic position than non-drinkers; moderate drinkers seemed to have a worse risk profile than non-drinkers. These confounding patterns were different from that in Western countries and may thereby help us make causal inferences regarding alcohol and health.

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台湾不饮酒和饮酒成年人的特征及其对酒精流行病学研究的影响。
背景:混淆是酒精与健康因果推论的主要威胁。一种建议的因果推理方法是比较不同国家的队列中获得的关联,我们知道这些国家的混杂结构是不同的。为了探讨台湾饮酒与健康相关的混淆结构,我们使用台湾营养与健康调查(2013-2016)的数据,比较饮酒者和非饮酒者特征的差异。方法:采用横断面调查方法,在全国范围内收集具有代表性的台湾居民资料,其中男性2846人,女性2833人,年龄在19岁及以上。我们使用了有关饮酒的信息以及社会人口学和健康行为变量的协变量。我们进行了性别分层的多项逻辑回归,以评估每个自变量与饮酒(不饮酒者、偶尔饮酒者和适度饮酒者)之间的关系。结果:在男性中,31%不饮酒者,7%曾经饮酒者,43%偶尔饮酒者,13%适度饮酒者,5%重度饮酒者。在女性中,62%不饮酒者,1%曾经饮酒者,32%偶尔饮酒者,4%适度饮酒者,1%重度饮酒者。在男性和女性中,偶尔饮酒者的受教育程度更高,家庭经济问题更少,但在调整年龄后,与不饮酒者相比,他们有更多的吸烟和嚼槟榔的行为。适度饮酒者甚至有更多吸烟和嚼槟榔的行为。男性适度饮酒者也报告了比不饮酒者更多的合并症。结论:我们观察到偶尔饮酒者比不饮酒者具有更好的社会经济地位;适度饮酒者似乎比不饮酒者的风险更大。这些混杂模式与西方国家不同,因此可能有助于我们对酒精和健康做出因果推论。
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来源期刊
PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE 生物-生物学
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
5.40%
发文量
14242
审稿时长
3.7 months
期刊介绍: PLOS ONE is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access, online publication. PLOS ONE welcomes reports on primary research from any scientific discipline. It provides: * Open-access—freely accessible online, authors retain copyright * Fast publication times * Peer review by expert, practicing researchers * Post-publication tools to indicate quality and impact * Community-based dialogue on articles * Worldwide media coverage
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