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首页> 外文期刊>BMJ Open >Socioeconomic patterning of excess alcohol consumption and binge drinking: a cross-sectional study of multilevel associations with neighbourhood deprivation
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Socioeconomic patterning of excess alcohol consumption and binge drinking: a cross-sectional study of multilevel associations with neighbourhood deprivation

机译:过量饮酒和暴饮酒的社会经济模式:与邻里剥夺的多层次协会的横断面研究

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Objectives The influence of neighbourhood deprivation on the risk of harmful alcohol consumption, measured by the separate categories of excess consumption and binge drinking, has not been studied. The study objective was to investigate the effect of neighbourhood deprivation with age, gender and socioeconomic status (SES) on (1) excess alcohol consumption and (2) binge drinking, in a representative population survey. Design Cross-sectional study: multilevel analysis. Setting Wales, UK, adult population ~2.2 million. Participants 58?282 respondents aged 18?years and over to four successive annual Welsh Health Surveys (2003/2004–2007), nested within 32?692 households, 1839 census lower super output areas and the 22 unitary authority areas in Wales. Primary outcome measure Maximal daily alcohol consumption during the past week was categorised using the UK Department of Health definition of ‘noneever drinks’, ‘within guidelines’, ‘excess consumption but less than binge’ and ‘binge’. The data were analysed using continuation ratio ordinal multilevel models with multiple imputation for missing covariates. Results Respondents in the most deprived neighbourhoods were more likely to binge drink than in the least deprived (adjusted estimates: 17.5% vs 10.6%; difference=6.9%, 95% CI 6.0 to 7.8), but were less likely to report excess consumption (17.6% vs 21.3%; difference=3.7%, 95% CI 2.6 to 4.8). The effect of deprivation varied significantly with age and gender, but not with SES. Younger men in deprived neighbourhoods were most likely to binge drink. Men aged 35–64 showed the steepest increase in binge drinking in deprived neighbourhoods, but men aged 18–24 showed a smaller increase with deprivation. Conclusions This large-scale population study is the first to show that neighbourhood deprivation acts differentially on the risk of binge drinking between men and women at different age groups. Understanding the socioeconomic patterns of harmful alcohol consumption is important for public health policy development.
机译:目的尚未研究通过过度消费和暴饮暴食的不同类别来衡量邻里剥夺对有害酒精消费风险的影响。该研究的目的是在有代表性的人口调查中调查具有年龄,性别和社会经济地位(SES)的邻里剥夺对(1)过量饮酒和(2)暴饮酒的影响。设计横断面研究:多层次分析。英国,威尔士,成年人口约220万。参与者58至282名年龄在18岁以上且连续进行了四次年度威尔士健康调查(2003 / 2004–2007)的受访者,嵌套在32至692户家庭,1839年人口普查较低的超级产出地区和威尔士的22个统一机构地区。主要结局指标过去一周内,英国卫生部对“每日最大饮酒量”的定义为“无/从未饮酒”,“在指导范围内”,“过量饮酒但少于暴饮暴食”和“暴饮暴食”。使用连续比率序数多级模型对缺失的协变量进行多重插补来分析数据。结果与最贫穷的地区相比,最贫穷的地区的受访者更有可能狂饮(调整后的估计值:17.5%vs 10.6%;差异= 6.9%,95%CI为6.0至7.8),但不太可能报告过量消费( 17.6%和21.3%;差异= 3.7%,95%CI为2.6至4.8)。剥夺的影响随年龄和性别显着变化,但与SES无关。贫困地区的年轻人最容易酗酒。在贫困地区,年龄在35-64岁之间的男性暴饮暴食增加幅度最大,但在贫困地区,年龄在18-24岁之间的男性暴饮暴食幅度却较小。结论这项大规模的人口研究是第一个表明邻里剥夺对不同年龄段的男女酗酒风险有不同影响的研究。了解有害酒精消费的社会经济模式对于制定公共卫生政策很重要。

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