Gruenewald Paul J
Prevention Research Center, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Berkeley, CA 94704, USA.
Addiction. 2007 Jun;102(6):870-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2007.01856.x.
This paper summarizes several theoretical perspectives that serve to explain observed associations between concentrations of alcohol outlets and alcohol-related problems. A critique of each perspective discusses how each addresses the social etiology of these problems; that is, how, where and why these problems arise in association with alcohol outlets?
This theoretical work is based upon mathematical and computational models of the ecology of alcohol-related problems developed in the 'Ecosystems Modeling Project', an advanced research project of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, United States.
Associations between outlets and problems are thought to arise from the concentration of individuals in drinking places ('flow models'), the attraction of some places for people at risk for problems ('gravity models'), or because outlets are located in high-risk neighborhoods and have negative social normative effects ('social contextual models'). None of these approaches explain how some outlets come to have more problems than others (e.g. violent outlets). An alternative social ecological model is introduced which asserts that the complementary processes of niche marketing and assortative drinking form the social dynamic that explains these relationships. Alcohol sellers 'niche market' to select social strata, drinkers return to establishments at which they find people like themselves, and consequent social stratification of the market-place increases the levels of related problems in some outlets.
The proposed mechanism is very general, and suggests that over-concentrations of outlets will lead to stratification of drinking groups and intensification of problems related to those outlets.
本文总结了几种理论观点,这些观点有助于解释酒精销售点的密度与酒精相关问题之间已观察到的关联。对每种观点的批判讨论了它们如何阐述这些问题的社会病因;也就是说,这些问题是如何、在何处以及为何与酒精销售点相关联而出现的?
这项理论研究基于美国国立酒精滥用与酒精中毒研究所的一个高级研究项目“生态系统建模项目”中所开发的酒精相关问题生态学的数学和计算模型。
销售点与问题之间的关联被认为源于饮酒场所中个体的聚集(“流动模型”)、某些场所对有问题风险人群的吸引力(“引力模型”),或者是因为销售点位于高风险社区且具有负面的社会规范效应(“社会背景模型”)。这些方法均未解释为何有些销售点比其他销售点存在更多问题(例如暴力频发的销售点)。本文引入了一种替代性的社会生态模型,该模型断言利基营销和选择性饮酒的互补过程形成了解释这些关系的社会动态。酒精销售者进行“利基市场”定位以选择社会阶层,饮酒者会回到能找到与自己相似人群的场所,由此导致的市场社会分层增加了一些销售点的相关问题水平。
所提出的机制具有很强的普遍性,表明销售点过度集中会导致饮酒群体分层,并加剧与这些销售点相关的问题。