Chan Gary C K, Leung Janni, Connor Jason, Hall Wayne, Kelly Adrian B
Centre for Youth Substance Abuse Research, The University of Queensland, QLD, Brisbane, 4072, Australia.
Queensland Centre for Mental Health Research, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2017 Jun 9;17(1):560. doi: 10.1186/s12889-017-4472-8.
Existing research on parental supply of alcohol analyses the effects of self-reported parental supply on adolescent drinking using individual level data. This study examined the contextual effect of parental supply of alcohol on adolescent alcohol use by examining the association between the prevalence of parental supply in each Australian state and adolescent alcohol use using a multilevel analytic framework.
Adolescent samples (Age: 12-17) were drawn from the four National Drug Strategy Household Surveys (2004, 2007, 2010 and 2013; N = 6803). The prevalence of parental supply of alcohol, defined as the weighted percentage of sample who reported obtaining alcohol from their parents, was estimated in each state and territory across the four surveys. Three multilevel logistic regressions were used to examine the contextual effects of parental supply prevalence on adolescents' alcohol use in the past 12 months, weekly drinking and heavy drinking.
Overall, adolescents' rates of past 12 months alcohol use, heavy drinking and weekly drinking between 2004 and 2013 were 40.1, 14.4 and 6.4% respectively. The prevalence of parental supply was significantly associated with past 12 months alcohol use (OR = 1.06, p < .001) and heavy drinking (OR = 1.04, p < .001) but not with weekly drinking (OR = 1.03, p = .189). The results were adjusted for gender, age, socio-economic index for area, place of birth, survey year and prevalence of peer supply.
A high prevalence of parental supply in a region was associated with heavier adolescent drinking, regardless of whether adolescents primarily obtained their alcohol from their own parents.
现有的关于父母提供酒精饮料的研究使用个体层面的数据分析了自我报告的父母提供酒精饮料对青少年饮酒的影响。本研究通过使用多层次分析框架,考察澳大利亚各州父母提供酒精饮料的普遍程度与青少年酒精使用之间的关联,以检验父母提供酒精饮料对青少年酒精使用的背景效应。
青少年样本(年龄:12 - 17岁)取自四次全国药物战略家庭调查(2004年、2007年、2010年和2013年;N = 6803)。在这四次调查中,对每个州和领地父母提供酒精饮料的普遍程度进行了估计,该普遍程度定义为报告从父母那里获得酒精饮料的样本加权百分比。使用三个多层次逻辑回归来检验父母提供酒精饮料的普遍程度对青少年在过去12个月内饮酒、每周饮酒及重度饮酒的背景效应。
总体而言,2004年至2013年期间,青少年过去12个月饮酒、重度饮酒和每周饮酒的比例分别为40.1%、14.4%和6.4%。父母提供酒精饮料的普遍程度与过去12个月饮酒(比值比 = 1.06,p <.001)和重度饮酒(比值比 = 1.04,p <.001)显著相关,但与每周饮酒无关(比值比 = 1.03,p =.189)。结果针对性别、年龄、地区社会经济指数、出生地、调查年份及同伴提供酒精饮料的普遍程度进行了调整。
一个地区父母提供酒精饮料的高普遍程度与青少年更频繁饮酒相关,无论青少年是否主要从自己父母那里获得酒精饮料。