National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
School of Medicine, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia.
Addiction. 2020 Oct;115(10):1833-1843. doi: 10.1111/add.15005. Epub 2020 Mar 6.
Recent research suggests that parental supply of alcohol is associated with more risky drinking and alcohol-related harm among adolescents. However, the overall effect of parental supply throughout adolescence remains unclear, because parental supply of alcohol varies during adolescence. Due to the complexity of longitudinal data, standard analytical methods can be biased. This study examined the effect of parental supply of alcohol on alcohol-related outcomes in early adulthood using robust methods to minimize risk of bias.
Prospective longitudinal cohort study.
Australia PARTICIPANTS: A cohort of school students (n = 1906) recruited in the first year of secondary school (average age 12.9 years) from Australian schools in 2010-11, interviewed annually for 7 years.
The exposure variable was self-reported parental supply of alcohol (including sips/whole drinks) during 5 years of adolescence (waves 1-5). Outcome variables were self-reported binge drinking, alcohol-related harm and symptoms of alcohol use disorder, measured in the two waves after the exposure period (waves 6-7). To reduce risk of bias, we used targeted maximum likelihood estimation to assess the (counterfactual) effect of parental supply of alcohol in all five waves versus no supply on alcohol-related outcomes.
Parental supply of alcohol throughout adolescence saw greater risk of binge drinking [risk ratios (RR) = 1.53; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.27-1.84] and alcohol-related harms (RR = 1.44; 95% CI = 1.22-1.69) in the year following the exposure period compared with no supply in adolescence. Earlier initiation of parental supply also increased risk of binge drinking (RR = 1.10; 95% CI = 1.05-1.14), and any alcohol-related harm (RR = 1.09; 95% CI = 1.05-1.13) for each year earlier parental supply began compared with later (or no) initiation.
Adolescents whose parents supply them with alcohol appear to have an increased risk of alcohol-related harm compared with adolescents whose parents do not supply them with alcohol. The risk appears to increase with earlier initiation of supply.
最近的研究表明,父母提供酒精会导致青少年饮酒风险更高和酒精相关伤害。然而,由于青春期期间父母提供酒精的情况有所不同,青春期内父母提供酒精的总体影响仍不清楚。由于纵向数据的复杂性,标准分析方法可能存在偏差。本研究使用稳健的方法检查了青春期父母提供酒精对成年早期酒精相关结果的影响,以最小化偏差风险。
前瞻性纵向队列研究。
澳大利亚
2010-11 年从澳大利亚学校招募的中学一年级学生队列(平均年龄 12.9 岁),在 7 年内每年进行一次访谈。
暴露变量是青春期 5 年内(第 1-5 波)自我报告的父母提供的酒精(包括小口/整杯)。结果变量是在暴露期后(第 6-7 波)两次测量的狂欢饮酒、酒精相关伤害和酒精使用障碍症状。为了降低偏差风险,我们使用有针对性的最大似然估计来评估青春期内父母提供酒精的(反事实)效果,与不提供酒精相比,对所有五个波的酒精相关结果。
与青春期内不提供酒精相比,整个青春期父母提供酒精会导致狂欢饮酒的风险增加[风险比(RR)=1.53;95%置信区间(CI)=1.27-1.84]和暴露期后一年的酒精相关伤害(RR=1.44;95%CI=1.22-1.69)。更早开始父母提供酒精也会增加狂欢饮酒的风险(RR=1.10;95%CI=1.05-1.14),以及更早开始父母提供酒精的任何一年的酒精相关伤害风险(RR=1.09;95%CI=1.05-1.13)与较晚(或不)开始相比。
与父母不提供酒精的青少年相比,父母提供酒精的青少年似乎有更高的酒精相关伤害风险。风险似乎随着供应的提前开始而增加。