Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, Center for Tobacco Research, The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbus, OH, USA.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, College of Human Medicine, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA.
Transl Behav Med. 2023 Sep 28;13(10):784-793. doi: 10.1093/tbm/ibad045.
Alcohol consumption is prevalent in young adult women and linked with breast cancer risk. Research to inform interventions targeting alcohol consumption as a breast cancer prevention strategy is limited. We examined young women's awareness of alcohol use as a breast cancer risk factor, identified correlates of awareness, and determined how awareness and conceptual predictors relate to intentions to reduce drinking. Women aged 18-25 years who drank alcohol in the past month (N = 493) completed a cross-sectional survey. Measures captured sociodemographics, breast cancer risk factors, awareness of alcohol use as a breast cancer risk factor, intentions to reduce drinking, and conceptual predictors. Analyses examined correlates of awareness and associations between awareness, conceptual predictors, and intentions to reduce drinking. Awareness was low (28%) and intentions to reduce drinking were moderate (M = 2.60, SD = 0.73, range 1-4). In multivariable analyses, awareness was associated with greater worry about cancer, beliefs that there's not much one can do to reduce cancer risk and everything causes cancer, higher perceived breast cancer risk, and stronger beliefs that reducing drinking reduces breast cancer risk. Awareness was not associated with intentions to reduce drinking. Younger age, older age of alcohol initiation, negative attitudes towards alcohol, fewer friends consuming alcohol, and stronger self-efficacy were associated with intentions to reduce drinking. Few young women recognize alcohol consumption as a breast cancer risk factor. Researchers and policymakers can apply our findings to design new or refine existing interventions to optimize their impact on awareness and alcohol consumption in young women.
饮酒在年轻成年女性中很普遍,并且与乳腺癌风险相关。针对将饮酒作为乳腺癌预防策略的干预措施进行研究的信息有限。我们研究了年轻女性对酒精使用作为乳腺癌风险因素的认识,确定了认识的相关因素,并确定了认识和概念预测因素与减少饮酒的意图之间的关系。年龄在 18-25 岁之间、过去一个月内饮酒的女性(N=493)完成了一项横断面调查。测量了社会人口统计学、乳腺癌风险因素、对酒精使用作为乳腺癌风险因素的认识、减少饮酒的意图以及概念预测因素。分析检查了认识的相关因素以及认识、概念预测因素与减少饮酒意图之间的关联。认识程度较低(28%),减少饮酒的意图中等(M=2.60,SD=0.73,范围 1-4)。在多变量分析中,认识与对癌症的担忧增加、认为对降低癌症风险没有多少可做的和一切都会致癌的信念、更高的感知乳腺癌风险以及更强的信念有关,即减少饮酒可降低乳腺癌风险。认识与减少饮酒的意图无关。年龄较小、饮酒年龄较早、对酒精的消极态度、饮酒的朋友较少以及自我效能感较强与减少饮酒的意图有关。很少有年轻女性认识到饮酒是乳腺癌的一个风险因素。研究人员和政策制定者可以根据我们的发现来设计新的或改进现有的干预措施,以优化其对年轻女性的认识和饮酒行为的影响。