Burden of Disease Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa; Division of Public Health Medicine, School of Public Health and Family Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, South Africa.
Burden of Disease Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa; Division of Health Systems and Public Health, Department of Global Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa .
S Afr Med J. 2022 Sep 30;112(8b):662-675. doi: 10.7196/SAMJ.2022.v112i8b.16487.
Alcohol use was one of the leading contributors to South Africa (SA)'s disease burden in 2000, accounting for 7% of deaths and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) in the first South African Comparative Risk Assessment Study (SACRA1). Since then, patterns of alcohol use have changed, as has the epidemiological evidence pertaining to the role of alcohol as a risk factor for infectious diseases, most notably HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis (TB).
To estimate the burden of disease attributable to alcohol use by sex and age group in SA in 2000, 2006 and 2012.
The analysis follows the World Health Organization (WHO)'s comparative risk assessment methodology. Population attributable fractions (PAFs) were calculated from modelled exposure estimated from a systematic assessment and synthesis of 17 nationally representative surveys and relative risks based on the global review by the International Model of Alcohol Harms and Policies. PAFs were applied to the burden of disease estimates from the revised second South African National Burden of Disease Study (SANBD2) to calculate the alcohol-attributable burden for deaths and DALYs for 2000, 2006 and 2012. We quantified the uncertainty by observing the posterior distribution of the estimated prevalence of drinkers and mean use among adult drinkers (≥15 years old) in a Bayesian model. We assumed no uncertainty in the outcome measures.
The alcohol-attributable disease burden decreased from 2000 to 2012 after peaking in 2006, owing to shifts in the disease burden, particularly infectious disease and injuries, and changes in drinking patterns. In 2012, alcohol-attributable harm accounted for an estimated 7.1% (95% uncertainty interval (UI) 6.6 - 7.6) of all deaths and 5.6% (95% UI 5.3 - 6.0) of all DALYs. Attributable deaths were split three ways fairly evenly across major disease categories: infectious diseases (36.4%), non-communicable diseases (32.4%) and injuries (31.2%). Top rankings for alcohol-attributable DALYs for specific causes were TB (22.6%), HIV/AIDS (16.0%), road traffic injuries (15.9%), interpersonal violence (12.8%), cardiovascular disease (11.1%), cancer and cirrhosis (both 4%). Alcohol remains an important contributor to the overall disease burden, ranking fifth in terms of deaths and DALYs.
Although reducing overall alcohol use will decrease the burden of disease at a societal level, alcohol harm reduction strategies in SA should prioritise evidence-based interventions to change drinking patterns. Frequent heavy episodic (i.e. binge) drinking accounts for the unusually large share of injuries and infectious diseases in the alcohol-attributable burden of disease profile. Interventions should focus on the distal causes of heavy drinking by focusing on strategies recommended by the WHO's SAFER initiative.
在 2000 年,南非(SA)的酒精使用是导致疾病负担的主要原因之一,占第一份南非比较风险评估研究(SACRA1)中死亡人数和伤残调整生命年(DALY)的 7%。从那时起,酒精使用模式发生了变化,与酒精作为传染病风险因素的流行病学证据也发生了变化,尤其是艾滋病毒/艾滋病和结核病(TB)。
估计 2000 年、2006 年和 2012 年南非因酒精使用而导致的疾病负担。
该分析遵循世界卫生组织(WHO)的比较风险评估方法。通过对 17 项全国代表性调查的系统评估和综合以及基于国际酒精危害和政策模型的全球审查的相对风险,从建模暴露中计算出人群归因分数(PAF)。将 PAF 应用于经修订的第二次南非国家疾病负担研究(SANBD2)的疾病负担估计值,以计算 2000 年、2006 年和 2012 年因死亡和 DALY 而导致的酒精归因负担。我们通过观察在贝叶斯模型中成年饮酒者(≥15 岁)的饮酒者流行率和平均使用量的后验分布来量化不确定性。我们假设结果衡量没有不确定性。
2006 年达到峰值后,2000 年至 2012 年期间,酒精相关疾病负担下降,这归因于疾病负担的转移,特别是传染病和伤害,以及饮酒模式的变化。2012 年,酒精相关危害估计占所有死亡人数的 7.1%(95%置信区间(95%UI)6.6-7.6)和所有 DALY 的 5.6%(95%UI 5.3-6.0)。归因于死亡的情况大致均匀地分布在主要疾病类别中:传染病(36.4%)、非传染性疾病(32.4%)和伤害(31.2%)。特定原因的酒精相关 DALY 的排名最高的是结核病(22.6%)、艾滋病毒/艾滋病(16.0%)、道路交通伤害(15.9%)、人际暴力(12.8%)、心血管疾病(11.1%)、癌症和肝硬化(均为 4%)。酒精仍然是整体疾病负担的重要原因,按死亡和 DALY 计算,排名第五。
尽管减少整体酒精使用量将降低社会层面的疾病负担,但南非的酒精危害减少策略应优先考虑基于证据的干预措施,以改变饮酒模式。频繁的重度间歇性(即狂欢)饮酒导致伤害和传染病在酒精相关疾病负担构成中占比异常大。干预措施应侧重于通过关注世卫组织 SAFER 倡议推荐的策略来关注重度饮酒的远因。