Alcohol Research Group, Public Health Institute, Emeryville, California.
Center for Behavioral Health Epidemiology, Implementation, and Evaluation Research, RTI International, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2024 Nov;85(6):794-803. doi: 10.15288/jsad.23-00387. Epub 2024 Jun 2.
The purpose of this study was to measure the prevalence and overlap of secondhand harms from other people's use of alcohol, cannabis, opioids, or other drugs and examine sociodemographic and other correlates of these secondhand harms.
This cross-sectional analysis used data from 7,799 respondents (51.6% female; 12.9% Black, 15.6% Hispanic/Latiné; mean age = 47.6 years) in the 2020 U.S. National Alcohol Survey. Secondhand harms included family/marriage difficulties, traffic accidents, vandalism, physical harm, and financial difficulties. Weighted prevalence estimates provided nationally representative estimates of these harms. Logistic regression assessed associations between individual characteristics and secondhand harms.
Lifetime prevalence of secondhand harms from alcohol, cannabis, opioids, or other drugs was 34.2%, 5.5%, 7.6%, and 8.3%, respectively. There was substantial overlap among lifetime harms: Almost 30% of those reporting secondhand alcohol harms also reported secondhand drug harms. Significant correlates of secondhand substance harms included female sex (alcohol, other drugs); White (alcohol, opioids), American Indian/Alaska Native (opioids), and Black (cannabis) race/ethnicity; and separated/divorced/widowed marital status (opioids). Those reporting a family history of alcohol problems had significantly higher odds of reporting secondhand harms across substance types. Individuals who reported frequent cannabis use had higher odds of reporting secondhand alcohol and opioid harms compared to those with no cannabis use (aOR = 1.55; aOR = 2.38) but lower odds of reporting secondhand cannabis harms (aOR = 0.51).
Although less prevalent than secondhand alcohol harms, 14% of participants reported secondhand harms from someone else's drug use and frequently experienced secondhand harms attributed to multiple substances. Population-focused interventions are needed to reduce the total burden of alcohol and other drug use.
本研究旨在衡量他人使用酒精、大麻、阿片类药物或其他药物所带来的间接危害的流行率和重叠情况,并探讨这些间接危害的社会人口学和其他相关因素。
本横断面分析使用了 2020 年美国全国酒精调查中 7799 名受访者(51.6%为女性;12.9%为黑人,15.6%为西班牙裔/拉丁裔;平均年龄为 47.6 岁)的数据。间接危害包括家庭/婚姻困难、交通事故、故意破坏、人身伤害和经济困难。加权患病率估计提供了这些危害在全国范围内的代表性估计。逻辑回归评估了个体特征与间接危害之间的关联。
终生接触酒精、大麻、阿片类药物或其他药物所带来的间接危害的发生率分别为 34.2%、5.5%、7.6%和 8.3%。终生危害之间存在很大的重叠:报告接触二手酒精危害的人中,几乎有 30%也报告接触二手药物危害。间接物质危害的显著相关因素包括女性(酒精、其他药物);白人(酒精、阿片类药物)、美国印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民(阿片类药物)和黑人(大麻)种族/民族;以及离异/丧偶/鳏居(阿片类药物)的婚姻状况。报告有家族酗酒史的人报告接触间接物质危害的可能性显著更高。与无大麻使用者相比,经常使用大麻的人报告接触二手酒精和阿片类药物危害的可能性更高(OR = 1.55;OR = 2.38),但报告接触二手大麻危害的可能性更低(OR = 0.51)。
尽管间接接触酒精危害的发生率较低,但仍有 14%的参与者报告了他人使用药物所带来的间接危害,并且经常经历多种物质所带来的间接危害。需要以人群为重点的干预措施来减轻酒精和其他药物使用带来的总负担。