Salom Caroline L, Williams Gail M, Najman Jake M, Alati Rosa
School of Population Health, The University of Queensland, Public Health Building, Herston Rd, Herston 4006, QLD, Australia.
School of Population Health, The University of Queensland, Public Health Building, Herston Rd, Herston 4006, QLD, Australia.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2014 Sep 1;142:146-53. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2014.06.011. Epub 2014 Jun 19.
Alcohol and mental health disorders are highly prevalent in the general population, with co-occurrence recognised as a major public health issue. Socio-economic factors are frequently associated with both disorders but their temporal association is unclear. This paper examines the association between prenatal socio-economic disadvantage and comorbid alcohol and mental health disorders at young adulthood.
An unselected cohort of women was enrolled during early pregnancy in the large longitudinal Mater-University of Queensland Study of Pregnancy (MUSP), at the Mater Misericordiae Public Hospital in Brisbane, Australia. The mothers and their offspring were followed over a 21 year period. Offspring from the MUSP birth cohort who provided full psychiatric information at age 21 and whose mothers provided socioeconomic information at baseline were included (n=2399). Participants were grouped into no-disorder, mental health disorder only, alcohol disorder only or comorbid alcohol and mental health disorders according to DSM-IV diagnoses at age 21 as assessed by the Composite International Diagnostic Interview. We used multivariate logistic regression analysis to compare associations of disorder group with single measures of prenatal socio-economic disadvantage including family income, parental education and employment, and then created a cumulative scale of socioeconomic disadvantage.
Greater socio-economic disadvantage was more strongly associated with comorbidity (OR 3.36; CI95 1.37, 8.24) than with single disorders. This relationship was not fully accounted for by maternal mental health, smoking and drinking during pregnancy.
Multiple domains of socio-economic disadvantage in early life are associated with comorbid alcohol and mental health disorders.
酒精与精神健康障碍在普通人群中极为普遍,二者并存被视为一个重大的公共卫生问题。社会经济因素常常与这两种障碍都有关联,但其时间关联尚不清楚。本文探讨了产前社会经济劣势与青年期酒精使用障碍和精神健康障碍共病之间的关联。
在澳大利亚布里斯班仁慈圣母公立医院进行的大型纵向昆士兰大学母亲孕期研究(MUSP)中,选取了一组未经过筛选的孕妇队列。对母亲及其后代进行了为期21年的随访。纳入了MUSP出生队列中在21岁时提供了完整精神科信息且其母亲在基线时提供了社会经济信息的后代(n = 2399)。根据21岁时通过综合国际诊断访谈评估的DSM-IV诊断,将参与者分为无疾病组、仅患有精神健康障碍组、仅患有酒精使用障碍组或酒精使用障碍与精神健康障碍共病组。我们使用多变量逻辑回归分析来比较疾病组与产前社会经济劣势单一指标(包括家庭收入、父母教育程度和就业情况)之间的关联,然后创建了一个社会经济劣势累积量表。
社会经济劣势越大,与共病的关联(比值比3.36;95%置信区间1.37, 8.24)比与单一疾病的关联更强。这种关系并未完全由母亲孕期的精神健康状况、吸烟和饮酒情况所解释。
生命早期社会经济劣势的多个领域与酒精使用障碍和精神健康障碍共病有关。