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饮酒文化和社会经济风险因素与第一代和第二代移民的酒精和药物使用障碍的关系:对瑞典人群数据的纵向分析。

Drinking cultures and socioeconomic risk factors for alcohol and drug use disorders among first- and second-generation immigrants: A longitudinal analysis of Swedish population data.

机构信息

Alcohol Research Group, Public Health Institute, Emeryville, CA, USA.

Center for Primary Health Care Research, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden.

出版信息

Drug Alcohol Depend. 2021 Sep 1;226:108804. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2021.108804. Epub 2021 Jun 18.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Few longitudinal studies investigate predictors of substance use incidence among immigrants. The current study describes substance use disorders in immigrants to Sweden, focusing on drinking culture in the country of origin and socioeconomic status (SES), and how these intersect with generational status to influence risk.

METHODS

Using pseudonymized Swedish population registry data, we track onset of alcohol use disorder and drug use disorder in a longitudinal study of 815,778 first-generation immigrants and 674,757 second-generation immigrants from 64 countries over a 6-year period. Cox regression analysis estimated risks of alcohol and drug use disorders in second-generation immigrants compared to first-generation, and moderation analyses assessed interactions of generational status with country-of-origin per capita alcohol consumption and SES.

RESULTS

Immigrants and second-generation immigrants originating from countries with high levels of alcohol consumption had higher risks for alcohol and drug use disorders. Immigrants with high SES had lower risks for alcohol and drug use disorders. The interaction between generational status and country-of-origin alcohol consumption was significant for drug use disorder (not for alcohol use disorder), with drug use disorder risk for second-generation immigrants being highest for those from countries with the lowest level of country-of-origin per capita alcohol consumption. The interaction between generational status and SES was significant for alcohol use disorder, with low-SES second-generation immigrants showing markedly higher risk than first-generation immigrants with comparable SES.

CONCLUSIONS

Among immigrants in Sweden, second-generation immigrants are at increased risk of developing alcohol and drug use disorders, particularly if they have lower SES. Policy and community attention to these high-risk subgroups in immigrant communities is warranted.

摘要

背景

鲜有纵向研究调查移民中物质使用发生率的预测因素。本研究描述了移民到瑞典后的物质使用障碍,重点关注原籍国的饮酒文化和社会经济地位(SES),以及这些因素如何与代际地位交叉影响风险。

方法

我们使用匿名化的瑞典人口登记数据,在一项对 815778 名第一代移民和 674757 名来自 64 个国家的第二代移民的纵向研究中,追踪酒精使用障碍和药物使用障碍的发病情况。Cox 回归分析估计了第二代移民与第一代移民相比发生酒精和药物使用障碍的风险,并进行了调节分析,评估了代际地位与原籍国人均酒精消费和 SES 的交互作用。

结果

原籍国酒精消费水平高的移民和第二代移民发生酒精和药物使用障碍的风险更高。SES 较高的移民发生酒精和药物使用障碍的风险较低。代际地位与原籍国酒精消费之间的交互作用对药物使用障碍有显著意义(对酒精使用障碍没有显著意义),即原籍国人均酒精消费水平最低的第二代移民发生药物使用障碍的风险最高。代际地位与 SES 之间的交互作用对酒精使用障碍有显著意义,SES 较低的第二代移民发生酒精使用障碍的风险明显高于 SES 可比的第一代移民。

结论

在瑞典的移民中,第二代移民发生酒精和药物使用障碍的风险增加,特别是 SES 较低的移民。有必要在移民社区中关注这些高风险亚群,并制定相应的政策和社区措施。

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