美国男性和女性的饮酒模式:从青春期到中年早期的种族和民族差异。

IF 3 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Alcohol (Hanover, York County, Pa.) Pub Date : 2024-06-03 DOI:10.1111/acer.15308
Christina C. Tam, Libo Li, Camillia K. Lui, Won Kim Cook
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:美国年轻成年男女的饮酒模式一直未得到充分研究,尤其是亚裔美国人和西班牙裔美国人等种族和民族群体。由于与酒精相关的种族和民族健康差异在中年时期持续存在或加剧,因此确定危险饮酒的高峰年龄有助于减少差异:我们利用 "全国青少年到成人健康纵向研究"(National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health)调查了:(1)非西班牙裔白人(NHW)、黑人、西班牙裔和亚裔男性和女性从 12 岁到 41 岁过去 12 个月的大量偶发性饮酒(HED)和饮酒总量,以及(2)种族和民族与饮酒的年龄关联。西班牙裔和亚裔群体按历史饮酒模式进行分类。时变效应模型考虑了主要的人口混杂因素:结果:非华裔男性和女性的饮酒率在 20 岁出头时有所上升,在 30 岁时再次上升。黑人男性和女性的饮酒率直到 30 多岁才有所上升。在西班牙裔男性和女性中,饮酒高峰期因性别和亚群体饮酒模式而异。亚裔男性的高饮酒量和总饮酒量高峰出现在30岁出头,而亚裔女性的高饮酒量高峰出现在20岁出头。一些少数种族和民族的男性和女性在某些年龄段的饮酒量与他们的非高危人群并无差异:结论:美国人口中不同种族和性别的亚群体饮酒量增加的年龄段各不相同。认识到这些群体差异可以加深我们对干预时机的理解。
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Drinking patterns among US men and women: Racial and ethnic differences from adolescence to early midlife

Background

Drinking patterns among young adult men and women in the United States have been understudied, especially among racial and ethnic groups such as Asian Americans and Hispanics. Because alcohol-related racial and ethnic health disparities persist or increase in midlife, identifying peak ages of hazardous drinking could help to reduce disparities.

Methods

We used the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health to examine: (1) past 12-month heavy episodic drinking (HED) and total alcohol volume consumption among non-Hispanic White (NHW), Black, Hispanic, and Asian men and women from ages 12 through 41, and (2) age-varying associations of race and ethnicity with drinking. Hispanic and Asian ethnic groups were disaggregated by historical drinking patterns. Time-varying effect models accounted for major demographic confounders.

Results

NHW men and women experienced elevated drinking rates in their early 20s, with a second elevation in their 30s. Black men and women did not have elevated drinking until their 30s. Among Hispanic men and women, peak drinking periods varied by gender and subgroup drinking pattern. Peak HED and total consumption emerged in the early 30s for Asian men, while peak HED occurred in the early 20s for Asian women. Drinking at certain ages for some racial and ethnic minoritized men and women did not differ from that in their NHW counterparts.

Conclusions

Age periods during which subgroups in the U.S. population experience elevated alcohol consumption vary by ethnicity and gender. Recognition of these group differences could enhance our understanding of intervention timing.

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