Casswell Sally, Pledger Megan, Hooper Rhonda
Alcohol and Public Health Research Unit, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Addiction. 2003 May;98(5):601-10. doi: 10.1046/j.1360-0443.2003.00331.x.
To investigate the relationship between several indicators of socioeconomic status and drinking patterns in young adulthood.
Data collected in a longitudinal study of young adults was analysed using repeated-measures models to examine the relationship between income, occupational activity and educational achievement and patterns of drinking.
These data were collected as part of a longitudinal study ofa birth cohort of New Zealanders. They were interviewed for the most part in a central location using a face-to-face method and a computer-assisted alcohol interview.
The participants were members of the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development study aged 18, 21 and 26 years. Nine hundred and sixty-nine study members contributed to the analysis. Study members have been found to be broadly representative of the New Zealand population and cross national studies suggest findings are generalizable to other similar market economies.
Three indicators of socioeconomic status were used; educational achievement, occupational activity and income. The educational achievement indicator at age 18 had three levels that ranged from no school qualifications to higher school qualifications. For age 21 two additional categories of tertiary educational achievement were included to make five categories and for age 26 higher tertiary degrees were included in the measure to make six categories. Five categories of occupational activity were used. Income data was also used. Two measures of alcohol consumption were used. These were the frequency of drinking and the typical quantity of alcohol consumed per drinking occasion in the past year.
Frequency of drinking increased over these early adult years and the quantities consumed peaked at age 21 and decreased thereafter for both males and females. Frequency of drinking was influenced by income with the higher income respondents drinking more often and this was persistent overtime. Quantity of drinking was most influenced by educational achievement. The less well-educated young adult drank significantly more during a drinking occasion and at all ages. There was also a relationship between educational achievement and frequency of drinking for males at age 18 and a relationship between women's occupational activity and the quantities they consumed.
The finding that the dimensions of drinking operate differently explains the lack of consistency in previous research, which has investigated socioeconomic status and the volumes of alcohol consumed. The findings of higher quantities consumed among those of lower social status may explain some of the reduced life expectancy found among those with lower socioeconomic status.
研究青年期社会经济地位的几个指标与饮酒模式之间的关系。
对一项针对青年成年人的纵向研究收集的数据,使用重复测量模型进行分析,以检验收入、职业活动和教育成就与饮酒模式之间的关系。
这些数据是作为一项对新西兰出生队列的纵向研究的一部分收集的。大部分访谈是在一个中心地点采用面对面的方法和计算机辅助酒精访谈进行的。
参与者是达尼丁多学科健康与发展研究中年龄为18岁、21岁和26岁的成员。969名研究成员参与了分析。研究成员被发现大致代表了新西兰人口,跨国研究表明研究结果可推广到其他类似的市场经济体。
使用了社会经济地位的三个指标;教育成就、职业活动和收入。18岁时的教育成就指标有三个水平,从不具备学历到高中学历。21岁时,增加了另外两类高等教育成就,共分为五类;26岁时,该测量中纳入了更高的高等学位,共分为六类。使用了五类职业活动。还使用了收入数据。使用了两种酒精消费测量方法。分别是饮酒频率和过去一年中每次饮酒场合的典型饮酒量。
在这些青年成年期,饮酒频率增加,饮酒量在21岁时达到峰值,此后男性和女性的饮酒量均下降。饮酒频率受收入影响,收入较高的受访者饮酒更频繁,且这种情况长期存在。饮酒量受教育成就影响最大。受教育程度较低的青年成年人在饮酒场合的饮酒量在各个年龄段都明显更多。18岁男性的教育成就与饮酒频率之间也存在关系,女性的职业活动与她们的饮酒量之间也存在关系。
饮酒维度运作方式不同这一发现解释了先前研究中缺乏一致性的情况,先前研究调查的是社会经济地位与酒精消费量之间的关系。社会地位较低者饮酒量较高的研究结果可能解释了社会经济地位较低者预期寿命降低的部分原因。