Ngo Thye Peng, Cuffaro Taylor, Santos Glenn-Milo
National Clinician Scholars Program at University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States.
San Francisco Veterans Affairs Health Care System, San Francisco, CA, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend Rep. 2024 Nov 6;13:100297. doi: 10.1016/j.dadr.2024.100297. eCollection 2024 Dec.
Hazardous alcohol consumption (HAC) is prevalent among sexual minority men (SMM). Using syndemic theory, this study aimed to identify the number of syndemic conditions, including their combinations, and their association with HAC among SMM in San Francisco.
We conducted a secondary analysis of cross-sectional data from 246 SMM who consume alcohol. Syndemic factors included multiple substance use, depressive symptoms, HIV/STI status, and houselessness. We conducted a multivariable logistic regression to estimate the odds of HAC associated with increasing syndemic conditions. We further examined which combinations of three syndemic factors were associated with the highest odds for HAC.
The average age was 40.7; participants were predominantly White (33.3 %) and Black/African American (29.7 %) and graduated from high school (92.7 %). The prevalence of HAC increased with the number of syndemic conditions: 13.6 % with none, 30.9 % with one, 51.9 % with two, 65.1 % with three, and 69.2 % with four conditions. A significant log-linear trend was observed, with two syndemic conditions increasing the odds of HAC over fivefold (AOR=5.05, 95 % CI=1.68-15.15), and three and four syndemic conditions increasing the odds by more than eightfold (AOR=8.82, 95 % CI=2.74-28.39; AOR=8.55, 95 % CI=2.26-32.28). The combination of depressive symptoms, HIV/STI status, and houselessness tripled the odds for HAC (OR=3.07, 95 % CI=1.34-7.04).
HAC was associated with increasing syndemics, and specific conditions (depression, HIV/STI, and houselessness) had the greatest odds of HAC. These findings underscore the need for comprehensive screening and integrated interventions targeting these co-occurring conditions to reduce HAC in this population.
有害饮酒(HAC)在性少数男性(SMM)中普遍存在。本研究运用共病理论,旨在确定旧金山SMM中共病状况的数量(包括其组合情况)以及这些共病状况与HAC之间的关联。
我们对246名饮酒的SMM的横断面数据进行了二次分析。共病因素包括多种物质使用、抑郁症状、HIV/性传播感染状况以及无家可归。我们进行了多变量逻辑回归分析,以估计与共病状况增加相关的HAC几率。我们进一步研究了三种共病因素的哪些组合与HAC的最高几率相关。
平均年龄为40.7岁;参与者主要为白人(33.3%)和黑人/非裔美国人(29.7%),且高中毕业率为92.7%。HAC的患病率随着共病状况数量的增加而上升:无共病状况者为13.6%,有一种共病状况者为30.9%,有两种共病状况者为51.9%,有三种共病状况者为65.1%,有四种共病状况者为69.2%。观察到显著的对数线性趋势,有两种共病状况使HAC几率增加超过五倍(调整后比值比[AOR]=5.05,95%置信区间[CI]=1.68 - 15.15),有三种和四种共病状况使几率增加超过八倍(AOR=8.82,95% CI=2.74 - 28.39;AOR=8.55,95% CI=2.26 - 32.28)。抑郁症状、HIV/性传播感染状况和无家可归的组合使HAC几率增加两倍(比值比[OR]=3.07,95% CI=1.34 - 7.04)。
HAC与共病状况的增加相关,特定状况(抑郁、HIV/性传播感染和无家可归)出现HAC的几率最高。这些发现强调了针对这些并发状况进行全面筛查和综合干预以减少该人群中HAC的必要性。