Norström T, Skog O J
Swedish Institute for Social Research, Stockholm University, S-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden.
Addiction. 2001 Feb;96 Suppl 1:S5-17. doi: 10.1080/09652140020021143.
This supplement includes a collection of papers that aim at estimating the relationship between per capita alcohol consumption and various forms of mortality, including mortality from liver cirrhosis, accidents, suicide, homicide, ischaemic heart disease, and total mortality. The papers apply a uniform methodological protocol, and they are all based on time series data covering the post-war period in the present EU countries and Norway. In this paper we discuss various methodological and analytical issues that are common to these papers. We argue that analysis of time series data is the most feasible approach for assessing the aggregate health consequences of changes in population drinking. We further discuss how aggregate data may also be useful for judging the plausibility of individual-level relationships, particularly those prone to be confounded by selection effects. The aggregation of linear and curvilinear risk curves is treated as well as various methods for dealing with the time-lag problem. With regard to estimation techniques we find country specific analyses preferable to pooled cross-sectional/time series models since the latter incorporate the dubious element of geographical co-variation, and conceal potentially interesting variations in alcohol effects. The approach taken in the papers at hand is instead to pool the country specific results into three groups of countries that represent different drinking cultures; traditional wine countries of southern Europe, beer countries of central Europe and the British Isles and spirits countries of northern Europe. The findings of the papers reinforce the central tenet of the public health perspective that overall consumption is an important determinant of alcohol-related harm rates. However, there is a variation across country groups in alcohol effects, particularly those on violent deaths, that indicates the potential importance of drinking patterns. There is no support for the notion that increases in per capita consumption have any cardioprotective effects at the population level.
本增刊包含一系列论文,旨在估计人均酒精消费量与各种死亡形式之间的关系,包括肝硬化、事故、自杀、他杀、缺血性心脏病导致的死亡率以及总死亡率。这些论文采用了统一的方法学方案,且均基于涵盖当前欧盟国家和挪威战后时期的时间序列数据。在本文中,我们讨论了这些论文共有的各种方法学和分析问题。我们认为,时间序列数据分析是评估人群饮酒变化对总体健康影响的最可行方法。我们还进一步讨论了总体数据如何也有助于判断个体层面关系的合理性,特别是那些容易受到选择效应混淆的关系。文中还探讨了线性和曲线风险曲线的汇总以及处理时间滞后问题的各种方法。关于估计技术,我们发现针对特定国家的分析比混合横截面/时间序列模型更可取,因为后者包含地理协变量这一可疑因素,并掩盖了酒精效应中潜在有趣的差异。手头这些论文所采用的方法是,将特定国家的结果汇总为代表不同饮酒文化的三组国家:南欧的传统葡萄酒消费国、中欧以及不列颠群岛的啤酒消费国和北欧的烈酒消费国。这些论文的研究结果强化了公共卫生观点的核心原则,即总体消费量是与酒精相关伤害率的重要决定因素。然而,不同国家组在酒精效应方面存在差异,尤其是对暴力死亡的影响,这表明饮酒模式可能具有重要意义。没有证据支持人均消费量增加在人群层面具有任何心脏保护作用这一观点。