Division of Field Studies and Engineering, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Division of Population Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Subst Use Misuse. 2020;55(12):1968-1979. doi: 10.1080/10826084.2020.1784947. Epub 2020 Jul 3.
Excessive alcohol use, including binge drinking (i.e., ≥5 drinks (males); ≥4 drinks (females), per occasion during the past 30 days), is associated with work-related injuries, absenteeism, and lost productivity. Binge drinking varies by sociodemographic characteristics (e.g., age, sex, income). However, information on binge drinking by occupation is limited. This study examined binge drinking prevalence, frequency, intensity, and total binge drinks per binge drinker by sociodemographic characteristics and occupation. Data were analyzed from 358,355 currently employed U.S. adults who resided in the 32 states that administered the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System industry and occupation questions during 2013-2016. Binge drinking was evaluated using weighted and adjusted prevalence models. Among currently employed adults in the 32 states, 20.8% reported binge drinking, with an average of nearly 49 times per year and an average intensity of 7.4 drinks per binge episode, resulting in 478 total binge drinks per binge drinker. The adjusted binge drinking prevalence ranged from 15.9% among community and social services workers to 26.3% among construction and extraction workers. The total annual binge drinks per binge drinker ranged from 207 drinks among community and social services workers to 749 drinks among construction and extraction workers. One in five employed adults binge drink, and binge drinking varied across occupation groups. Widespread use of effective community-based strategies for preventing excessive alcohol use (e.g., regulating alcohol outlet density), as well as interventions tailored to specific occupation groups, and could reduce binge drinking and improve occupational safety and health.
过量饮酒,包括 binge drinking(即男性过去 30 天内每次饮酒 ≥5 杯,女性 ≥4 杯),与工作相关的伤害、旷工和生产力损失有关。 binge drinking 因社会人口特征(如年龄、性别、收入)而异。然而,关于职业 binge drinking 的信息有限。本研究调查了社会人口特征和职业 binge drinking 的流行率、频率、强度和每个 binge drinker 的 binge drinking 总杯数。数据来自 2013-2016 年居住在实施行为风险因素监测系统行业和职业问题的 32 个州的 358355 名目前就业的美国成年人。使用加权和调整后的流行率模型评估 binge drinking。在这 32 个州的目前就业成年人中,20.8%报告 binge drinking,平均每年近 49 次,平均强度为每次 binge episode 7.4 杯,导致每个 binge drinker 有 478 总 binge drinks。调整后的 binge drinking 流行率范围从社区和社会服务工作者的 15.9%到建筑和开采工人的 26.3%。每个 binge drinker 的总年度 binge drinks 从社区和社会服务工作者的 207 杯到建筑和开采工人的 749 杯不等。五分之一的成年员工 binge drinking,且 binge drinking 在职业群体中存在差异。广泛使用有效的基于社区的预防过度饮酒策略(例如,调节酒精销售点密度),以及针对特定职业群体的干预措施,可以减少 binge drinking,改善职业安全和健康。