Kelly Adrian B, Chan Gary C K, Weier Megan, Quinn Catherine, Gullo Matthew J, Connor Jason P, Hall Wayne D
Centre for Youth Substance Abuse Research, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia.
Centre for Youth Substance Abuse Research, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2016 Apr 14;16:325. doi: 10.1186/s12889-016-3004-2.
Most adolescents begin alcohol consumption during adolescence, heavy alcohol use by adolescents is common, and alcohol-related harm amongst adolescents is a major public health burden. Parents are a common source of alcohol amongst adolescents, but little is known about how parental supply of alcohol has changed over recent years. This study examines national trends in parental supply of alcohol to adolescent children in Australia since 1998.
Six Australian National Drug Strategy Household Surveys (1998-2013) yielded rates of parental supply of current and first ever alcohol consumed. Lifetime and current alcohol use were also estimated. The surveys were conducted for households across all Australian states and territories. Surveyed adolescents were aged 14-17 years (N = 7357, 47.6 % male). Measures included the reported source of currently consumed alcohol and first ever alcoholic beverage (parents/friends/others), lifetime alcohol use, number of standard alcohol units consumed on drinking days, and frequency of alcohol use. Corrected Pearson chi-squared tests were used to compare survey years.
There was a significant drop in parental supply of current alcohol use from 21.3 % in 2004 to 11.79 % in 2013 (p < .001). The lower prevalence of parental supply coincided with legislative changes on parental supply of alcohol to adolescents, but causality cannot be established because of the variation in the timing and reach of parental supply legislation, and small samples in some states. There were downward trends in adolescent experimentation, quantity and frequency of alcohol use across years, with the largest drop in alcohol use in 2010 and 2013.
In Australia, there has been a substantial reduction in parental supply of alcohol to adolescents from 2010, and this factor may partially account for reductions in adolescent alcohol use.
大多数青少年在青春期开始饮酒,青少年大量饮酒的现象很常见,且青少年中与酒精相关的危害是一项重大的公共卫生负担。父母是青少年获取酒精的常见来源,但近年来父母提供酒精的情况变化却鲜为人知。本研究调查了自1998年以来澳大利亚父母向青少年子女提供酒精的全国趋势。
六项澳大利亚国家药物战略家庭调查(1998 - 2013年)得出了父母提供当前饮用和首次饮用酒精的比率。还估算了终生和当前的酒精使用情况。这些调查针对澳大利亚所有州和领地的家庭进行。接受调查的青少年年龄在14 - 17岁之间(N = 7357,47.6%为男性)。测量指标包括报告的当前饮用酒精和首次饮用酒精饮料的来源(父母/朋友/其他人)、终生酒精使用情况、饮酒日饮用的标准酒精单位数量以及饮酒频率。使用校正后的皮尔逊卡方检验来比较各调查年份。
父母提供当前酒精使用的比例从2004年的21.3%显著下降至2013年的11.79%(p < 0.001)。父母提供酒精的较低患病率与向青少年提供酒精的父母供应立法变化相吻合,但由于父母供应立法的时间和范围存在差异以及一些州的样本量较小,无法确定因果关系。多年来青少年的尝试性饮酒、酒精使用量和频率呈下降趋势,2010年和2013年酒精使用量下降幅度最大。
在澳大利亚,自2010年以来父母向青少年提供酒精的情况大幅减少,这一因素可能部分解释了青少年酒精使用量的减少。