School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Glob Health Action. 2013 Jan 24;6:19274. doi: 10.3402/gha.v6i0.19274.
Alcohol is a risk factor for the leading causes of mortality and morbidity among young people Globally. Youth drinking, initiated in early adolescence and continued into early adulthood, is influenced by maternal socio-demographic factors and maternal education. Limited prospective data exists in South Africa on the prevalence of alcohol use during adolescence and adolescent and maternal socio-demographic correlates.
To examine the prevalence of lifetime alcohol use during early (13 years) and late (18 years) adolescence in Soweto, South Africa, and its association with child and maternal socio-demographic factors.
Data on alcohol use in early adolescence (age 13 years) and late adolescence (age 18 years) were collected using self-completed pen and paper and self-completed computer-based questionnaires, respectively. Univariate analyses were conducted on child (gender and number of school years repeated by grade 7), maternal socio-demographic correlates (education, marital status, and age), and household socioeconomic status (SES). Bivariate logistic regression analyses examined associations between alcohol use and all child and maternal socio-demographic factors. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were conducted on all the variables found to be significantly (pB0.10) associated with alcohol use to examine the predictive value on alcohol use at early and late adolescence.
Lifetime alcohol use increased from 22% at early adolescence to 66% at late adolescence. In multivariate analyses, gender, maternal education, and SES predicted lifetime alcohol use at early adolescence, while gender, maternal education, marital status, and SES were predictive of the same at late adolescence.
This study aids researchers and practitioners to identify maternal and child socio-demographic risk profiles for alcohol use to inform policies and programmes.
酒精是导致全球年轻人死亡和发病的主要原因之一。青少年饮酒始于青春期早期,并持续到成年早期,受母亲社会人口统计学因素和母亲教育的影响。南非在青少年和青少年及母亲社会人口统计学相关因素期间使用酒精的流行率方面,前瞻性数据有限。
研究南非索韦托青少年早期(13 岁)和晚期(18 岁)期间终生饮酒的流行率及其与儿童和母亲社会人口统计学因素的关系。
使用自我完成的纸笔和自我完成的计算机基问卷调查分别收集青少年早期(13 岁)和青少年晚期(18 岁)的酒精使用数据。对儿童(性别和重复 7 年级的学年数)、母亲社会人口统计学因素(教育、婚姻状况和年龄)和家庭社会经济地位(SES)进行单变量分析。双变量逻辑回归分析检查了酒精使用与所有儿童和母亲社会人口统计学因素之间的关联。对所有与酒精使用显著相关(pB0.10)的变量进行多变量逻辑回归分析,以检查在青少年早期和晚期使用酒精的预测值。
终生酒精使用从青少年早期的 22%增加到青少年晚期的 66%。在多变量分析中,性别、母亲教育和 SES 预测了青少年早期的终生酒精使用,而性别、母亲教育、婚姻状况和 SES 则预测了青少年晚期的终生酒精使用。
本研究有助于研究人员和从业者确定与酒精使用相关的母亲和儿童社会人口统计学风险概况,以为政策和计划提供信息。