Kiri Janet, Hall James, Cortese Samuele, Brandt Valerie
School of Psychology, Centre for Innovation in Mental Health, University of Southampton, University Road, Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK.
Southampton Education School, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.
Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2025 Jan 18. doi: 10.1007/s00787-025-02644-6.
The directionality of the relationship between adolescent alcohol consumption and mental health difficulties remains poorly understood. This study investigates the longitudinal relationship between alcohol use frequency, internalizing and externalizing symptoms from the ages of 11 to 17. We conducted a random-intercept cross-lagged panel model across three timepoints (ages: 11yrs, 14yrs, 17yrs; 50.4% female) in the Millennium Cohort Study (N = 10,647). Survey weights were used to account for attrition. At each timepoint, past month alcohol use frequency was self-reported, parents and cohort members reported internalizing/externalizing symptoms using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. We controlled for alcohol expectancies, sex, and four cumulative risk indices (perinatal risk, early childhood adverse parenting, longitudinal parent-level risk occurrence, and persistent household socioeconomic deprivation). More frequent past month alcohol use at age 11 predicted increased internalizing symptoms at age 14 (β = 0.06; p =.01). More frequent past month alcohol use at age 14 predicted increased externalizing symptoms at age 17 (β = 0.11; p <.001). Increased internalizing symptoms consistently predicted reduced alcohol use at the next timepoint throughout the study period (11 years: β= -0.04; p =.03; 14 years: β= -0.09; p <.001). Increased externalizing symptoms at age 11 predicted increased alcohol consumption at age 14 (β = 0.06; p =.004). Frequent adolescent alcohol consumption represents a significant risk for subsequent mental health difficulties. Externalizing symptoms and alcohol use frequency appear to exacerbate one another. Internalizing symptoms may reduce the risk of frequent alcohol consumption. Incorporating routine alcohol screening into adolescent mental health treatment settings could reduce the risk of comorbid externalizing and alcohol use disorders.
青少年饮酒与心理健康问题之间关系的方向性仍未得到很好的理解。本研究调查了11至17岁期间饮酒频率、内化症状和外化症状之间的纵向关系。我们在千禧队列研究(N = 10647)中,通过三个时间点(年龄:11岁、14岁、17岁;女性占50.4%)进行了随机截距交叉滞后面板模型分析。使用调查权重来考虑损耗情况。在每个时间点,通过自我报告过去一个月的饮酒频率,父母和队列成员使用优势与困难问卷报告内化/外化症状。我们控制了饮酒期望、性别以及四个累积风险指数(围产期风险、幼儿期不良养育、纵向父母层面风险发生情况以及持续的家庭社会经济剥夺)。11岁时过去一个月饮酒频率更高预示着14岁时内化症状增加(β = 0.06;p = 0.01)。14岁时过去一个月饮酒频率更高预示着17岁时外化症状增加(β = 0.11;p < 0.001)。在整个研究期间,内化症状增加始终预示着下一个时间点饮酒量减少(11岁:β = -0.04;p = 0.03;14岁:β = -0.09;p < 0.001)。11岁时外化症状增加预示着14岁时饮酒量增加(β = 0.06;p = 0.004)。青少年频繁饮酒是随后出现心理健康问题的重大风险。外化症状和饮酒频率似乎相互加剧。内化症状可能会降低频繁饮酒的风险。将常规酒精筛查纳入青少年心理健康治疗环境中,可以降低共病外化和酒精使用障碍的风险。