Polen Michael R, Green Carla A, Perrin Nancy A, Anderson Bradley M, Weisner Constance M
Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Northwest, 3800 N. Interstate Avenue, Portland, OR 97227-1110, USA.
Addict Res Theory. 2010 Apr 1;18(2):122-142. doi: 10.3109/16066350903398486.
Despite considerable research, relationships among gender, alcohol consumption, and health remain controversial, due to potential confounding by health-related attitudes and practices associated with drinking, measurement challenges, and marked gender differences in drinking. We examined gender/alcohol consumption differences in health-related attitudes and practices, and evaluated how these factors affected relationships among gender, alcohol consumption, and health status.
A stratified random sample of adult health-plan members completed a mail survey, yielding 7884 respondents (2995 male/4889 female). Using MANCOVAs and adjusting for health-related attitudes, values, and practices, we examined gender differences in relationships between alcohol consumption and health.
More frequent heavy drinking was associated with worse health-related attitudes and values, worse feelings about visiting the doctor, and worse health-related practices. Relationships between health-related practices and alcohol use differed by gender, and daily or almost daily heavy drinking was associated with significantly lower physical and mental health for women compared to men. Drinking status (lifelong abstainers, former drinkers, and level of regular alcohol consumption) was related to health status and vitality, even after adjusting for health-related attitudes, values, and practices. Relationships did not differ by gender. Former drinkers reported lower physical and mental health status than either lifelong abstainers or current drinkers.
Drinking status is independently related to physical health, mental health, and vitality, even after controlling for the health-related attitudes, values, and practices expected to confound these relationships. Among current drinkers, women who engage in very frequent heavy drinking have worse physical and mental health than their male counterparts.
尽管进行了大量研究,但由于与饮酒相关的健康态度和行为可能造成混淆、测量方面的挑战以及饮酒方面显著的性别差异,性别、饮酒与健康之间的关系仍存在争议。我们研究了与健康相关的态度和行为方面的性别/饮酒差异,并评估了这些因素如何影响性别、饮酒与健康状况之间的关系。
对成年健康计划成员进行分层随机抽样,通过邮件调查获得了7884名受访者(2995名男性/4889名女性)。我们使用多变量协方差分析并对与健康相关的态度、价值观和行为进行调整,研究了饮酒与健康之间关系的性别差异。
更频繁的大量饮酒与更差的与健康相关的态度和价值观、看医生时更糟糕的感受以及更差的与健康相关的行为有关。与健康相关的行为和饮酒之间的关系因性别而异,与男性相比,女性每日或几乎每日大量饮酒与显著更低的身心健康相关。饮酒状况(终身戒酒者、既往饮酒者和常规饮酒水平)与健康状况和活力相关,即使在对与健康相关的态度、价值观和行为进行调整之后也是如此。这种关系不存在性别差异。既往饮酒者报告的身心健康状况低于终身戒酒者或当前饮酒者。
即使在控制了预期会混淆这些关系的与健康相关的态度、价值观和行为之后,饮酒状况仍与身体健康、心理健康和活力独立相关。在当前饮酒者中,非常频繁大量饮酒的女性比男性的身心健康状况更差。