Department of Psychiatry, Division of Social and Cultural Psychiatry, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
School of Physical and Occupational Therapy, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Global Health. 2021 Sep 19;17(1):109. doi: 10.1186/s12992-021-00758-5.
Alcohol control has emerged as an important global health challenge due to the expanding influence of alcohol companies and limited control measures imposed by governments. In the Peruvian Andean highland, the ritual function of collective drinking is reported to have been weakened in response to the increased availability of alcohol and the experience of political violence. This study seeks to merge the broader political economy with local experience and culture to provide a deeper understanding of the dynamic between global processes and local realities.
We used purposive sampling to recruit participants. We conducted in-depth interviews (n = 28) and focus group discussions (n = 19) with community participants, teachers, health workers, alcohol vendors and police officers. Thematic analysis identified patterns of individual and collective meaning situated in relation to social, political and economic factors.
Local perspectives and behaviour regarding loss of control over alcohol are shaped through the complex patterns of power and meaning exerted and experienced by different actors. Participants' emphasis on parents' lack of control over alcohol use by "abandoned" children reflects the structural vulnerability of some Andean families struggling with economic hardships. Participants also emphasized how alcohol consumption was tied to forms of control exerted by men in households. Participants expressed that some men demonstrated their masculine identity and symbolic power as the breadwinner through spending on alcohol. The third emphasis was tied to the market economy. Participants expressed that the expansion of the alcohol market and perceived absence of government control coupled with macroeconomic conditions, like poverty, shaped patterns of alcohol consumption.
Our findings illustrate how problem drinking is shaped not simply by an individual drinker's lack of self-control but also by a regulatory environment that enables the unrestrained marketing of alcohol products and the creation of a culture of consumption. Harmful consumption is mediated by the reshaping of the Andean cultural practice of collective drinking. Attending to local perspectives is essential for policies and interventions that connect structural dynamics with the cultural and experiential aspects of alcohol consumption.
由于酒精公司影响力的扩大以及政府实施的有限控制措施,酒精控制已成为全球健康面临的一个重要挑战。在秘鲁安第斯高地,据报道,由于酒精供应增加和政治暴力的经历,集体饮酒的仪式功能已经减弱。本研究旨在将更广泛的政治经济学与当地经验和文化相结合,以更深入地了解全球进程与当地现实之间的动态关系。
我们使用目的抽样招募参与者。我们对社区参与者、教师、卫生工作者、酒精供应商和警察进行了深入访谈(n=28)和焦点小组讨论(n=19)。主题分析确定了与社会、政治和经济因素相关的个人和集体意义模式。
当地对酒精失控的看法和行为是通过不同行为者施加和体验的权力和意义的复杂模式形成的。参与者强调父母对“被遗弃”孩子饮酒行为的失控,反映了一些安第斯家庭在经济困难中挣扎的结构性脆弱性。参与者还强调了饮酒如何与家庭中男性施加的控制形式有关。参与者表示,一些男性通过花钱买酒来展示自己作为养家糊口者的男性身份和象征性权力。第三个重点与市场经济有关。参与者表示,酒精市场的扩张以及政府控制的缺失,再加上贫困等宏观经济条件,塑造了酒精消费模式。
我们的研究结果表明,酗酒问题的形成不仅仅是因为个别饮酒者缺乏自我控制,还因为监管环境允许不受限制地推销酒精产品并创造消费文化。有害消费受到安第斯集体饮酒文化习俗的重塑的调节。关注当地观点对于将结构动态与酒精消费的文化和体验方面联系起来的政策和干预措施至关重要。