Dawson Deborah A, Grant Bridget F, Stinson Frederick S, Chou Patricia S
Division of Intramural Clinical and Biological Research, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health, Room 3083, MSC 9304, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-9304, USA.
J Stud Alcohol. 2006 Mar;67(2):195-203. doi: 10.15288/jsa.2006.67.195.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of transitional life events related to education, employment, and family formation on the likelihood of recovery from alcohol dependence as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV), distinguishing the short- and long-term effects of these events and potential effect modification by treatment history, gender, and severity of dependence.
This analysis is based on data from the Wave 1 2001-2002 National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC), a cross-sectional, retrospective survey of a nationally representative sample of U.S. adults 18 years of age and older. The analytic sample consisted of 4,422 individuals with prior-to-past-year (PPY) onset of DSM-IV alcohol dependence. Time-dependent proportional hazards models were used to estimate the effects of completing school, starting full-time work, getting married, becoming separated/divorced/widowed, and becoming a parent on the outcomes of nonabstinent recovery (NR; e.g., low-risk asymptomatic drinking) and abstinent recovery (AR).
Entry into and exit from a first marriage each increased the likelihood of NR during the first 3 years after those events occurred (hazard rate ratio [HRR] = 1.37 and 1.76, respectively). However, individuals who were still dependent 3 or more years after those events occurred had a decreased likelihood of subsequent NR (HRR = 0.70 for both events), as did those who were still dependent 3 or more years after completing schooling (HRR = 0.54). The likelihood of AR was more than doubled in the 3 years after first becoming a parent (HRR = 2.22) but was decreased among individuals still dependent 3 or more years after starting full-time work. For the outcome of NR, all of the negative effects associated with still being dependent 3 or more years after the occurrence of key life events were more strongly negative among individuals with less severe cases of dependence.
Transitional life events demonstrate many effects on recovery, including both direct effects consistent with role socialization and associations more reflective of selectivity than causation. Taken as a whole, these events appear to contribute to (but by no means fully explain) the high rates of recovery from alcohol dependence that have been observed even in the absence of treatment.
本研究旨在调查与教育、就业和组建家庭相关的过渡性生活事件对从酒精依赖中恢复的可能性的影响,酒精依赖的定义依据《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV),区分这些事件的短期和长期影响以及治疗史、性别和依赖严重程度对其潜在的效应修正作用。
本分析基于2001 - 2002年全国酒精及相关状况流行病学调查(NESARC)第一波的数据,这是一项对18岁及以上美国成年人具有全国代表性样本的横断面回顾性调查。分析样本包括4422名在过去一年之前(PPY)开始出现DSM-IV酒精依赖的个体。使用时间相依比例风险模型来估计完成学业、开始全职工作、结婚、分居/离婚/丧偶以及成为父母对非戒酒恢复(NR;例如低风险无症状饮酒)和戒酒恢复(AR)结果的影响。
首次婚姻的进入和退出在这些事件发生后的前3年中均增加了非戒酒恢复的可能性(风险率比[HRR]分别为1.37和1.76)。然而,在这些事件发生3年或更长时间后仍处于依赖状态的个体,随后非戒酒恢复的可能性降低(这两种事件的HRR均为0.70),完成学业3年或更长时间后仍处于依赖状态的个体也是如此(HRR = 0.54)。首次成为父母后的3年中,戒酒恢复的可能性增加了一倍多(HRR = 2.22),但在开始全职工作3年或更长时间后仍处于依赖状态的个体中则降低。对于非戒酒恢复的结果,在关键生活事件发生3年或更长时间后仍处于依赖状态所带来的所有负面影响,在依赖程度较轻的个体中更为强烈。
过渡性生活事件对恢复有多种影响,包括与角色社会化一致的直接影响以及更多反映选择性而非因果关系的关联。总体而言,这些事件似乎促成了(但绝不能完全解释)即使在没有治疗的情况下也观察到的高酒精依赖恢复率。