Kane Jeremy C, Johnson Renee M, Robinson Courtland, Jernigan David H, Harachi Tracy W, Bass Judith K
Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 624 North Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA
Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 624 North Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Alcohol Alcohol. 2016 Nov;51(6):702-709. doi: 10.1093/alcalc/agw007. Epub 2016 Mar 7.
Recent studies indicate that alcohol use is increasing among Asian American populations and that acculturation impacts alcohol use among immigrants in the USA. We investigated the longitudinal relationship between three domains of acculturation (traditionalism, biculturalism, assimilation) and alcohol use among 302 Vietnamese and Cambodian women in Washington State.
Data were obtained from the Cross Cultural Families Project (CCF), a 5-year longitudinal investigation of a random sample of Vietnamese and Cambodian immigrant families living in Washington State. Alcohol use was measured with a three item scale assessing frequency and quantity of use, and binge drinking. Acculturation was measured with the Suinn-Lew Asian Self-Identity Acculturation Scale. Linear mixed effects regression models were estimated to assess the impact of acculturation on alcohol use among the overall sample and among a sub-sample of only women who consumed any alcohol.
A majority of the sample, 73.2%, reported no alcohol use. In the overall sample, none of the three acculturation domains were significantly associated with drinking. Among a sub-sample of only those who reported any alcohol use, however, a greater degree of traditional cultural identification (β = -0.94, SE= 0.44, P= 0.03) and a greater degree of biculturalism (β = -1.33, SE= 0.53, P =0.01) were associated with lower levels of use.
Our findings suggest that acculturation did not impact alcohol use prevalence but that it did affect the drinking pattern among alcohol consumers. Clinicians should be cognizant that certain aspects of cultural identification are important contributors to drinking behavior among alcohol consumers in these populations.
近期研究表明,美国亚裔人群中的酒精使用呈上升趋势,且文化适应对美国移民的酒精使用有影响。我们调查了华盛顿州302名越南和柬埔寨女性在文化适应的三个方面(传统主义、双文化主义、同化)与酒精使用之间的纵向关系。
数据来自跨文化家庭项目(CCF),这是一项对居住在华盛顿州的越南和柬埔寨移民家庭随机样本进行的为期5年的纵向调查。酒精使用情况通过一个包含三项的量表进行测量,该量表评估使用频率、使用量和暴饮情况。文化适应情况通过苏因-刘亚洲自我认同文化适应量表进行测量。估计线性混合效应回归模型,以评估文化适应对总体样本以及仅对饮用过任何酒精的女性子样本中酒精使用的影响。
大部分样本(73.2%)报告未使用酒精。在总体样本中,文化适应的三个方面均与饮酒无显著关联。然而,在仅报告使用过任何酒精的子样本中,更强的传统文化认同程度(β = -0.94,标准误 = 0.44,P = 0.03)和更强的双文化主义程度(β = -1.33,标准误 = 0.53,P = 0.01)与较低的使用水平相关。
我们的研究结果表明,文化适应并未影响酒精使用流行率,但确实影响了饮酒者的饮酒模式。临床医生应认识到,文化认同的某些方面是这些人群中饮酒者饮酒行为的重要影响因素。