Department of Health Studies, University of Stavanger, Stavanger, Norway.
Presenter - Making Sense of Science, Stavanger, Norway.
PLoS One. 2017 Oct 17;12(10):e0186503. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0186503. eCollection 2017.
Alcohol use is a global health issue and may influence activity performance in a variety of domains, including the occupational and domestic spheres. The aim of the study was to examine the influence of annual drinking frequency and binge drinking (≥6 units at one occasion) on activity impairments both at work (sickness presenteeism) and outside the workplace.
Employees (n = 3278), recruited from 14 Norwegian private and public companies, responded to a questionnaire containing questions from the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) and the Workplace Productivity and Activity Impairment questionnaire (WPAI).
Multiple hierarchical regression analyses revealed that binge drinking was associated with both sickness presenteeism and impaired daily activities, even after controlling for gender, age, educational level, living status and employment sector. Annual drinking frequency was associated with impaired daily activities, but not sickness presenteeism.
Binge drinking seems to have a stronger influence on activity performance both at work and outside the workplace than drinking frequency. Interventions targeting alcohol consumption should benefit from focusing on binge drinking behavior.
饮酒是一个全球性的健康问题,可能会影响到各种领域的活动表现,包括职业和家庭领域。本研究的目的是调查年度饮酒频率和狂饮(一次性饮酒 6 个单位或以上)对工作(病假出勤)和工作场所之外的活动障碍的影响。
从挪威的 14 家私营和公共公司中招募了 3278 名员工,他们回答了一份包含酒精使用障碍识别测试(AUDIT)和工作场所生产力和活动障碍问卷(WPAI)问题的问卷。
多项层次回归分析显示,即使在控制了性别、年龄、教育水平、居住状况和就业部门后,狂饮仍与病假出勤和日常活动受损有关。年度饮酒频率与日常活动受损有关,但与病假出勤无关。
狂饮似乎比饮酒频率对工作和工作场所之外的活动表现有更强的影响。针对饮酒行为的干预措施应该受益于重点关注狂饮行为。