Norström Thor, Ramstedt Mats
Swedish Institute for Social Research, Stockholm, Sweden.
Drug Alcohol Rev. 2005 Nov;24(6):537-47. doi: 10.1080/09595230500293845.
The aim of this review was to review research addressing the relationship between population drinking and health, particularly mortality. The review is based primarily on articles published in international journals after 1994 to February 2005, identified via Medline. The method used in most studies is time-series analysis based on autoregressive intergrated moving average (ARIMA) modelling. The outcome measures covered included the following mortality indicators: mortality from liver cirrhosis and other alcohol-related diseases, accident mortality, suicide, homicide, ischaemic heart disease (IHD) mortality and all-cause mortality. The study countries included most of the EU member states as of 1995 (14 countries), Canada and the United States. For Eastern Europe there was only scanty evidence. The study period was in most cases the post-war period. There was a statistically significant relationship between per capita consumption and mortality from liver cirrhosis and other alcohol-related diseases in all countries. In about half the countries, there was a significant relationship between consumption, on one hand, and mortality from accidents and homicide as well as all-cause mortality on the other hand. A link between alcohol and suicide was found in all regions except for mid- and southern Europe. There was no systematic link between consumption and IHD mortality. Overall, a 1-litre increase in per capita consumption was associated with a stronger effect in northern Europe and Canada than in mid- and southern Europe. Research during the past decade has strengthened the notion of a relationship between population drinking and alcohol-related harm. At the same time, the marked regional variation in the magnitude of this relationship suggests the importance of drinking patterns for modifying the impact of alcohol. By and large, there was little evidence for any cardioprotective effect at the population level. It is a challenge for future research to reconcile this outcome with the findings from observational studies, most of which suggest a protective effect of moderate drinking.
本综述的目的是回顾关于人群饮酒与健康,尤其是死亡率之间关系的研究。该综述主要基于1994年之后至2005年2月发表在国际期刊上的文章,这些文章通过医学文献数据库(Medline)检索获得。大多数研究采用的方法是基于自回归积分滑动平均(ARIMA)模型的时间序列分析。涵盖的结局指标包括以下死亡率指标:肝硬化和其他酒精相关疾病导致的死亡率、事故死亡率、自杀率、凶杀率、缺血性心脏病(IHD)死亡率和全因死亡率。研究国家包括1995年时的大多数欧盟成员国(14个国家)、加拿大和美国。东欧的证据很少。研究时期大多为战后时期。在所有国家,人均饮酒量与肝硬化和其他酒精相关疾病导致的死亡率之间存在统计学上的显著关系。在大约一半的国家,饮酒量一方面与事故和凶杀导致的死亡率以及全因死亡率之间存在显著关系。除欧洲中部和南部外,在所有地区都发现了酒精与自杀之间的联系。饮酒量与缺血性心脏病死亡率之间没有系统性联系。总体而言,人均饮酒量每增加1升,在北欧和加拿大的影响比在欧洲中部和南部更强。过去十年的研究强化了人群饮酒与酒精相关危害之间存在关系的观念。同时,这种关系强度的显著区域差异表明饮酒模式对于改变酒精影响的重要性。总体而言,几乎没有证据表明在人群层面存在任何心脏保护作用。将这一结果与观察性研究的结果相协调是未来研究的一项挑战,大多数观察性研究表明适度饮酒具有保护作用。