Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health (ANSIRH), Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, Oakland, California.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2018 Mar;79(2):293-301. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2018.79.293.
Research on effects of pregnancy termination on women's alcohol, tobacco, and other drug (ATOD) use suffers from methodological and conceptual problems. Improving on prior methodologies, this study examines changes in ATOD use over 5 years among women seeking terminations.
Data are from the Turnaway Study, a longitudinal study of 956 women seeking terminations at 30 U.S. facilities. Participants presented just below a facility's gestational limit and received terminations (Near-Limits) or just beyond the limit and were denied terminations (Turnaways). Using mixed-effects logistic regression, we assessed differences in ATOD use over 5 years among Near-Limits and Turnaways.
There were no differences in ATOD use before pregnancy recognition; 1 week after termination seeking, Turnaways had lower odds than Near-Limits of any and heavy episodic alcohol use (p < .001), but not alcohol problem symptoms, tobacco use, or other drug use. Although both groups increased in any alcohol use over time, Turnaways increased more rapidly. Neither group increased any other ATOD measures over time. Turnaways' lower odds of heavy episodic alcohol use at 1 week after termination seeking were maintained throughout the subsequent 5 years. There was no differential change in problem alcohol use or in tobacco or other drug use over time, yet fewer Turnaways than Near-Limits reported problem alcohol symptoms 6 months through 3.5 years.
There is no indication that terminating a pregnancy led women to increase heavy episodic or problem alcohol use or to increase tobacco or other drug use. Women denied terminations had temporary or sustained reductions in all alcohol measures, but not tobacco or other drugs, suggesting that relationships between pregnancy/parenting and ATOD differ across substances.
终止妊娠对女性的酒精、烟草和其他药物(ATOD)使用的研究存在方法和概念问题。本研究在先前方法的基础上,研究了寻求终止妊娠的女性在 5 年内 ATOD 使用的变化。
数据来自于“Turnaway 研究”,这是一项对 30 家美国医疗机构的 956 名寻求终止妊娠的女性进行的纵向研究。参与者在一家医疗机构的妊娠限制以下就诊,并接受了终止妊娠(接近限制)或刚好超过限制并被拒绝终止妊娠(被拒绝)。我们使用混合效应逻辑回归,评估了接近限制和被拒绝在 5 年内 ATOD 使用的差异。
在妊娠确认前,两组的 ATOD 使用没有差异;在寻求终止妊娠的 1 周后,被拒绝组的任何和重度酒精使用的可能性都低于接近限制组(p <.001),但没有酒精问题症状、烟草使用或其他药物使用。尽管两组的任何酒精使用都随时间增加,但被拒绝组增加的速度更快。两组在任何其他 ATOD 测量指标上都没有随时间增加。被拒绝组在寻求终止妊娠 1 周后较低的重度酒精使用可能性在随后的 5 年内一直保持。在整个 5 年内,没有出现与问题饮酒或烟草或其他药物使用相关的差异变化,但与接近限制组相比,被拒绝组在 6 个月至 3.5 年内报告问题酒精症状的人数较少。
没有迹象表明终止妊娠会导致女性增加重度酒精或问题酒精使用,或增加烟草或其他药物使用。被拒绝组在所有酒精测量指标上都有暂时或持续的减少,但在烟草或其他药物上没有减少,这表明与怀孕/育儿相关的 ATOD 关系在不同物质上存在差异。