Coomber Kerri, Mayshak Richelle, Hyder Shannon, Droste Nicolas, Curtis Ashlee, Pennay Amy, Gilmore William, Lam Tina, Chikritzhs Tanya, Miller Peter G
School of Psychology, Faculty of Health, Deakin University, Geelong VIC 3220, Australia.
Centre for Alcohol Policy Research, Department of Psychology and Public Health, La Trobe University, Melbourne VIC 3000, Australia.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2017 Jan 12;14(1):75. doi: 10.3390/ijerph14010075.
This study examined the relationship between patron demographics, substance use, and experience of recent alcohol-related accidents and injuries that were not due to interpersonal violence in night-time entertainment districts. Cross-sectional interviews ( = 4016) were conducted around licensed venues in entertainment districts of five Australian cities. Demographic factors associated with non-violent alcohol-related injuries were examined, including gender, age, and occupation. The association between substance use on the night of interview; blood alcohol concentration (BAC), pre-drinking, energy drink consumption, and illicit drug use; and experience of injury was also explored. Thirteen percent of participants reported an alcohol-related injury within the past three months. Respondents aged younger than 25 years were significantly more likely to report an alcohol-related injury. Further, a significant occupation effect was found indicating the rate of alcohol-related injury was lower in managers/professionals compared to non-office workers. The likelihood of prior alcohol-related injury significantly increased with BAC, and self-reported pre-drinking, energy drink, or illicit drug consumption on the night of interview. These findings provide an indication of the demographic and substance use-related associations with alcohol-related injuries and, therefore, potential avenues of population-level policy intervention. Policy responses to alcohol-related harm must also account for an assessment and costing of non-violent injuries.
本研究调查了在夜间娱乐区,光顾者的人口统计学特征、物质使用情况,以及近期与酒精相关的非人际暴力导致的事故和伤害经历之间的关系。在澳大利亚五个城市娱乐区的持牌场所周围进行了横断面访谈(n = 4016)。研究了与非暴力酒精相关伤害相关的人口统计学因素,包括性别、年龄和职业。还探讨了访谈当晚的物质使用情况(血液酒精浓度(BAC)、预饮酒、能量饮料消费和非法药物使用)与伤害经历之间的关联。13%的参与者报告在过去三个月内有与酒精相关的伤害。25岁以下的受访者报告与酒精相关伤害的可能性显著更高。此外,发现了显著的职业效应,表明与非办公室工作人员相比,经理/专业人员中与酒精相关伤害的发生率较低。访谈当晚,先前与酒精相关伤害的可能性随着BAC以及自我报告的预饮酒、能量饮料或非法药物消费而显著增加。这些发现表明了与酒精相关伤害相关的人口统计学和物质使用方面的关联,因此也指出了在人群层面进行政策干预的潜在途径。对与酒精相关伤害的政策应对还必须考虑对非暴力伤害的评估和成本核算。