Harvard University Medical School Department of Population Medicine, USA; Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health Department of Epidemiology, USA.
Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health Department of Epidemiology, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2023 May;324:115878. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115878. Epub 2023 Mar 29.
People in the labor force and in high-status careers consume alcohol at high rates. State-level structural sexism (sex inequality in political/economic status) is inversely related to alcohol use among women. We examine whether structural sexism modifies women's labor force characteristics and alcohol consumption.
We surveyed frequency of alcohol consumption in the past month and any binge drinking in the past two weeks among women ages 19-45 in Monitoring the Future from 1989 to 2016 (N = 16,571) in relation to occupational characteristics (including employment status, high-status career, and occupational gender composition) and structural sexism (measured using state-level indicators of gender inequality) with multilevel interaction models controlled for state-level and individual confounders.
Working women and women in high-status occupations had higher risks of alcohol consumption than non-working women; differences were most pronounced in lower-sexism states. At the lowest sexism levels, employed women consumed alcohol more frequently (2.61 occasions of use in past 30 days, 95% CI 2.57, 2.64) than unemployed women (2.32, 95% CI 2.27, 2.37). Patterns were more pronounced for frequency of alcohol consumption than binge drinking. Occupational gender composition did not influence alcohol consumption.
In lower sexism states, working and having a high-status career are associated with increased alcohol consumption for women. Labor force engagement extends positive health benefits to women, but it also confers specific risks, which are sensitive to the broader social context; these findings contribute to a growing literature suggesting that alcohol risks are changing in relation to shifting social landscapes.
劳动力和高地位职业中的人群饮酒率较高。州级结构性性别歧视(政治/经济地位方面的性别不平等)与女性饮酒量呈负相关。我们研究了结构性性别歧视是否会改变女性的劳动力特征和饮酒量。
我们调查了 1989 年至 2016 年期间,在监测未来研究中,19-45 岁女性在过去一个月内饮酒频率以及过去两周内任何一次狂饮的情况,这些女性与职业特征(包括就业状况、高地位职业和职业性别构成)和结构性性别歧视(使用州级性别不平等指标衡量)有关,采用多层交互模型控制州级和个体混杂因素。
就业女性和从事高地位职业的女性比未就业女性饮酒风险更高;在性别歧视程度较低的州,差异最为明显。在性别歧视程度最低的情况下,就业女性的饮酒频率更高(过去 30 天内饮酒 2.61 次,95%CI 2.57,2.64),高于未就业女性(2.32,95%CI 2.27,2.37)。这种模式在饮酒频率方面比狂饮更为明显。职业性别构成并不影响饮酒量。
在性别歧视程度较低的州,工作和从事高地位职业与女性饮酒量增加有关。劳动力参与为女性带来了积极的健康益处,但也带来了特定的风险,这些风险对更广泛的社会环境敏感;这些发现为越来越多的文献提供了依据,表明与不断变化的社会环境有关,酒精风险正在发生变化。