Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Eleanor Rathbone Building, Bedford Street South, Liverpool, L69 7ZA, United Kingdom.
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Eleanor Rathbone Building, Bedford Street South, Liverpool, L69 7ZA, United Kingdom.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2021 Feb 1;219:108463. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2020.108463. Epub 2020 Dec 30.
Alcohol use and mental health problems often co-occur, however, little is known about how this varies by type of mental health problem and to what extent associations are explained by socioeconomic status (SES). Our study examined the prevalence and associations of non-drinking, hazardous use, and harmful/probable dependence in individuals who do and do not meet criteria for different mental health problems and whether associations remained after adjustment for SES.
A secondary analysis of an English dataset, 2014 Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey (N = 7,218), was conducted. The Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test was used to categorise participants as non-drinking, low risk, hazardous use and harmful/probable dependence. Mental health problems were screened using a range of validated tools. Multinomial logistic regression analyses were used to address study aims.
The prevalence of non-drinking, hazardous and harmful/probable dependence was higher among those meeting criteria for a mental health problem. After adjustment for SES, non-drinking was most common in those meeting criteria for probable psychotic disorder (MOR = 3.42, 95 %CI = 1.74-6.70), hazardous use in those meeting criteria for anti-social personality disorder (MOR = 2.66, 95 %CI = 1.69-4.20) and harmful/probable dependence in those meeting criteria for borderline personality disorder (MOR = 9.77, 95 % CI = 4.81-19.84).
There were marked increases in the odds of reporting both non-drinking and harmful drinking among those meeting criteria for a mental health problem, particularly more severe problems. Our findings indicate that the relationship between alcohol and mental health is more complex and comorbid alcohol and mental health problems should be treated in parallel with access to both services.
酒精使用和心理健康问题经常同时发生,然而,对于不同类型的心理健康问题的发生情况以及社会经济地位(SES)在多大程度上解释了这些关联,我们知之甚少。我们的研究调查了符合和不符合不同心理健康问题标准的个体中不饮酒、危险饮酒和有害/可能依赖的患病率和关联,以及在调整 SES 后关联是否仍然存在。
对 2014 年成人精神疾病发病率调查(N=7218)的英国数据集进行了二次分析。使用酒精使用障碍识别测试将参与者分为不饮酒、低危、危险使用和有害/可能依赖。使用多种经过验证的工具筛选心理健康问题。使用多项逻辑回归分析来解决研究目标。
符合心理健康问题标准的个体中不饮酒、危险和有害/可能依赖的患病率更高。在调整 SES 后,符合可能精神病性障碍标准的个体中不饮酒最为常见(MOR=3.42,95%CI=1.74-6.70),符合反社会人格障碍标准的个体中危险使用(MOR=2.66,95%CI=1.69-4.20),符合边缘型人格障碍标准的个体中有害/可能依赖(MOR=9.77,95%CI=4.81-19.84)。
在符合心理健康问题标准的个体中,报告不饮酒和有害饮酒的几率显著增加,尤其是更严重的问题。我们的研究结果表明,酒精和心理健康之间的关系更加复杂,共病的酒精和心理健康问题应该与获得两者的服务同时进行治疗。