University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, CT, United States.
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States; Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.
J Affect Disord. 2021 Oct 1;293:329-337. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.06.043. Epub 2021 Jun 24.
Depressive disorders are common among adults with alcohol use disorder and with suicidality; however, demographic differences in comorbid alcohol use disorder, binge drinking, and suicidality are understudied. The objective of this study was to determine the extent to which comorbid suicidality and alcohol use disorders and comorbid suicidality and binge drinking differ by age and gender among adults with depressive symptoms.
The sample included adults (unweighted N=29,460) in the United States who completed the 2015-2018 National Survey of Drug Use and Heath and screened positively for depression. Gender and age groups odds of alcohol use disorder only, suicidality only, and alcohol use disorder+suicidality were compared to neither problem. Similar analyses were conducted for binge drinking.
Men showed disproportional odds of alcohol use disorder only, all suicidality and alcohol use disorder comorbidities, and binge drinking+active suicidal ideation than women. Emerging adults showed higher odds of: passive and active suicidal ideation only and suicidality+alcohol use disorder than adults 35 and older; binge drinking only, binge drinking+passive suicidal ideation, and binge drinking+active suicidal ideation than all older adults; binge drinking+suicide planning and binge drinking+attempts than adults 50 and older.
Because participants all reported depression symptoms either at the subclinical or clinical level, demographic differences in suicidality, alcohol use disorder, and binge drinking found in this study cannot be generalized to non-depressed samples.
Treatment providers should be aware of disproportionately higher odds of comorbid suicidality and alcohol use disorder, and suicidality and binge drinking among men and emerging adults.
抑郁障碍在患有酒精使用障碍和有自杀倾向的成年人中很常见;然而,共病酒精使用障碍、 binge drinking 和自杀倾向的人口统计学差异研究不足。本研究的目的是确定在有抑郁症状的成年人中,共病自杀倾向和酒精使用障碍以及共病自杀倾向和 binge drinking 与年龄和性别差异的程度。
该样本包括在美国完成 2015-2018 年国家药物使用和健康调查并筛查出有抑郁症状的成年人(未加权 N=29460)。比较了仅酒精使用障碍、仅自杀倾向以及酒精使用障碍+自杀倾向的性别和年龄组的可能性,与无问题的情况进行了比较。对 binge drinking 也进行了类似的分析。
与女性相比,男性表现出不成比例的仅酒精使用障碍、所有自杀倾向和酒精使用障碍共病以及 binge drinking+active suicidal ideation 的可能性。与 35 岁及以上的成年人相比,青少年表现出更高的被动和主动自杀意念以及自杀倾向+酒精使用障碍的可能性;与所有老年人相比,仅 binge drinking、binge drinking+passive suicidal ideation 和 binge drinking+active suicidal ideation 的可能性更高;与 50 岁及以上的成年人相比,有 binge drinking+suicide planning 和 binge drinking+attempts 的可能性更高。
由于参与者都报告了亚临床或临床水平的抑郁症状,因此在本研究中发现的自杀倾向、酒精使用障碍和 binge drinking 的人口统计学差异不能推广到非抑郁样本。
治疗提供者应该意识到男性和青少年中,共病自杀倾向和酒精使用障碍以及自杀倾向和 binge drinking 的可能性更高。