Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Public Health Ontario, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Addiction. 2024 Dec;119(12):2162-2173. doi: 10.1111/add.16641. Epub 2024 Sep 4.
Heavy episodic drinking (HED) trends have not been comprehensively examined in Canada. We measured age, period and birth cohort trends in HED in Canada by sex/gender and socioeconomic position.
We analyzed repeat cross-sectional data from the 10 provinces in the Canadian Community Health Surveys from 2000 to 2021 using hierarchical cross-classified random effects logistic regression.
1 167 831 respondents aged 12+ .
HED was defined as 4+ standard drinks for women or 5+ for men at least monthly in the past 12 months. Socioeconomic position was measured using household income and education.
We observed steeper HED decreases in young adult men (aged 18-29) than women (by 14.4% and 8.7%, respectively, from 2015 to 2021) and HED increases in middle adult women (ages 50-64) (by 8.0% from 2000 to 2014). Sex/gender-specific age-period-cohort models revealed strong age and birth cohort effects. In women and men, respectively, HED peaked in young adulthood (18.2% and 33.8%) and decreased with age, and HED was greatest in the 1980-1989 cohort (20.7% and 35.8%) and decreased in the most recent cohort born in 1990-2009 (15.6% and 19.8%), particularly in men. Higher household incomes had greater HED across age, periods and cohorts, while trends varied by education. Compared with lower education groups, people with a bachelor's degree or above had the lowest HED in middle adulthood. People with a bachelor's degree or above had low HED in earlier cohorts, which converged with other education groups in recent cohorts due to a pronounced HED increase, particularly in women.
The sex/gender gap in heavy episodic drinking (HED) appears to be converging in Canada: current young adult men are reducing HED, while high-risk cohorts of women are aging into middle adulthood with greater HED. Recent birth cohorts with a bachelor's degree or above experienced pronounced HED increases, which among women suggests greater educational attainment contributes to the converging gender gap in HED.
在加拿大,尚未全面研究重度间歇性饮酒(HED)趋势。我们通过性别/性别和社会经济地位来衡量加拿大 HED 的年龄、时期和出生队列趋势。
我们使用分层交叉分类随机效应逻辑回归分析了 2000 年至 2021 年加拿大社区健康调查 10 个省份的重复横断面数据。
1167831 名 12 岁及以上的受访者。
HED 定义为过去 12 个月中至少每月有 4+ 标准饮料的女性或 5+ 标准饮料的男性。社会经济地位是通过家庭收入和教育来衡量的。
我们观察到年轻成年男性(18-29 岁)的 HED 下降幅度大于女性(分别从 2015 年到 2021 年下降 14.4%和 8.7%),中年女性(50-64 岁)的 HED 增加(从 2000 年到 2014 年增加 8.0%)。性别特定的年龄-时期-队列模型显示出强烈的年龄和出生队列效应。在女性和男性中,HED 分别在青年期达到峰值(18.2%和 33.8%),并随着年龄的增长而下降,在 1980-1989 年出生的队列中达到最高(20.7%和 35.8%),并在最近的 1990-2009 年出生的队列中下降(15.6%和 19.8%),特别是在男性中。较高的家庭收入在各个年龄段、时期和队列中都有较高的 HED,而趋势因教育程度而异。与较低的教育群体相比,拥有学士学位或以上的人在中年时 HED 最低。拥有学士学位或以上的人在较早的队列中 HED 较低,由于最近的队列中 HED 显著增加,他们与其他教育群体趋同,特别是在女性中。
在加拿大,重度间歇性饮酒(HED)的性别差距似乎正在缩小:当前的年轻成年男性正在减少 HED,而高风险的女性队列则进入中年,HED 更高。最近的拥有学士学位或以上的出生队列经历了显著的 HED 增加,其中女性的 HED 增加表明,更高的教育程度有助于缩小 HED 的性别差距。