Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London, WC1E 7HT, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2011 Jun 20;11:481. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-481.
In the post-Soviet period, Russian working-age men have suffered unusually high mortality rates. Earlier quantitative work found that part of this is attributable to hazardous and harmful patterns of alcohol consumption, which increased in the period of transition at a time of massive social and economic disruption and uncertainty. However, there has been very little work done to document and understand in detail the downward life trajectories of individual men who died prematurely from alcohol-related conditions. Building on an earlier case-control study, this unique qualitative study investigates the perceived interplay between men's drinking careers, their employment and family history, health and eventual death.
In-depth interviews were conducted with close relatives (most often the widow) of 19 men who died between 2003 and 2005 aged 25-54 years whose close relatives reported that alcohol contributed to their death. The study was conducted in a typical medium-sized Russian city. The relative's accounts were analysed using thematic content analysis.
The accounts describe how hazardous drinking both contributed to serious employment, family and health problems, and was simultaneously used as a coping mechanism to deal with life crises and a decline in social status. The interviews highlighted the importance of the workplace and employment status for shaping men's drinking patterns. Common themes emerged around a culture of drinking in the workplace, peer pressure from colleagues to drink, use of alcohol as remuneration, consuming non-beverage alcohols, Russian-specific drinking patterns, attitudes to treatment, and passive attitudes towards health and drinking.
The study provides a unique insight into the personal decline that lies behind the extremely high working-age mortality due to heavy drinking in Russia, and highlights how health status and hazardous drinking are often closely intertwined with economic and social functioning. Descriptions of the development of drinking careers, hazardous drinking patterns and treatment experiences can be used to plan effective interventions relevant in the Russian context.
在后苏联时期,俄罗斯的劳动年龄男性死亡率异常高。早期的定量研究发现,部分原因是由于危险和有害的饮酒模式,这种模式在转型时期增加,当时社会和经济受到巨大冲击和不确定性的影响。然而,对于过早死于与酒精相关疾病的个体男性的生命轨迹的详细情况,几乎没有进行过记录和深入了解。本研究基于一项早期的病例对照研究,对男性饮酒生涯、他们的就业和家庭史、健康状况以及最终死亡之间的相互作用进行了独特的定性研究。
对 19 名 25-54 岁男性的近亲(通常是寡妇)进行了深入访谈,这些男性在 2003 年至 2005 年间死亡,其近亲报告称酒精是导致他们死亡的原因。该研究在俄罗斯一个典型的中等城市进行。使用主题内容分析法对亲属的描述进行了分析。
这些描述说明了危险饮酒如何既导致严重的就业、家庭和健康问题,又同时被用作应对生活危机和社会地位下降的应对机制。访谈强调了工作场所和就业状况对塑造男性饮酒模式的重要性。出现了一些共同的主题,包括工作场所的饮酒文化、同事对饮酒的压力、酒精作为报酬的使用、非饮料酒精的消费、俄罗斯特有的饮酒模式、对治疗的态度以及对健康和饮酒的消极态度。
该研究深入了解了俄罗斯因大量饮酒导致劳动年龄人口死亡率极高背后的个人衰退情况,并强调了健康状况和危险饮酒如何与经济和社会功能密切相关。对饮酒生涯、危险饮酒模式和治疗经历的描述可用于规划与俄罗斯背景相关的有效干预措施。