Wells K B, Kamberg C, Brook R, Camp P, Rogers W
Med Care. 1985 Nov;23(11):1295-1306. doi: 10.1097/00005650-198511000-00008.
The relations among sociodemographic factors, health status, and use of prescribed sleeping pills and tranquilizers are examined. The data are from the Rand Health Insurance Experiment, which has a random sample of the nonaged, noninstitutionalized, civilian population in six U.S. sites. Information on sociodemographic factors, health status, and the use of prescribed psychotropic drugs during the previous 3 months was obtained from self-report questionnaires collected at enrollment. Mental and physical health status have large independent and significant effects on the probability of use of both prescribed tranquilizers (P less than 0.0001) and sleeping pills (P less than 0.0001), whether or not we remove the effects of sociodemographic factors. For the probability of tranquilizer use, there is no significant interaction between gender and mental health or between mental health and physical health. Age and gender have large and significant effects on the use of prescribed psychotropic drugs even after controlling for differences in health status and other demographic factors. The effects of site and socioeconomic status are modest compared with the effects of health, age, and gender.
研究了社会人口学因素、健康状况与处方安眠药和镇静剂使用之间的关系。数据来自兰德健康保险实验,该实验对美国六个地区的非老年人、非机构化平民人口进行了随机抽样。社会人口学因素、健康状况以及前三个月处方精神药物使用情况的信息,是通过在入组时收集的自我报告问卷获得的。无论是否去除社会人口学因素的影响,精神和身体健康状况对使用处方镇静剂(P<0.0001)和安眠药(P<0.0001)的概率都有很大的独立且显著的影响。对于使用镇静剂的概率,性别与心理健康之间或心理健康与身体健康之间不存在显著的交互作用。即使在控制了健康状况和其他人口统计学因素的差异之后,年龄和性别对处方精神药物的使用仍有很大且显著的影响。与健康、年龄和性别的影响相比,地区和社会经济地位的影响较小。