Herd D, Grube J
School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley 94720.
Addiction. 1993 Aug;88(8):1101-10. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.1993.tb02129.x.
This study explored whether black and white women differ in how often they drink in particular types of social settings and if drinking in different contexts independently predicts alcohol-related problems. The analysis was based on the interview responses of 635 black and 663 white women drinkers who represent sub-samples from a nationwide survey of 5221 respondents conducted in 1984. The findings revealed that white women are more likely to attend restaurants, bars and parties away from home than black women and that a larger proportion of their alcohol consumption occurs in these settings than among black women. Factor analysis was used to develop scales on the the frequency of drinking in different social contexts. The results confirmed a three-dimensional factor structure that distinguished between drinking at home; drinking in social settings such as bars, restaurants and parties; and drinking in outdoor public areas like streetcorners and parks. A simultaneous equations path analysis was used to model the relationships among drinking contexts, the frequency of heavier drinking, drinking problems, race and other social characteristics. The major findings of the resulting models were that drinking contexts independently predict drinking problems and that race is not directly associated with drinking contexts or alcohol-related problems. However racial differences do exert significant indirect effects on social settings and drinking problems through differences in socio-economic status and normative attitudes. The conclusion emphasizes the complexity of the interrelationships of ethnic and social characteristics that underlie visible racial differences in the social patterns and situational contexts of alcohol use.
本研究探讨了黑人女性和白人女性在特定社交场合的饮酒频率上是否存在差异,以及在不同情境下饮酒是否能独立预测与酒精相关的问题。该分析基于635名黑人女性饮酒者和663名白人女性饮酒者的访谈回复,这些受访者是1984年对5221名受访者进行的全国性调查的子样本。研究结果显示,与黑人女性相比,白人女性更有可能去餐馆、酒吧以及参加家庭以外的聚会,而且她们在这些场合的饮酒量占总饮酒量的比例高于黑人女性。因子分析被用于制定不同社交情境下饮酒频率的量表。结果证实了一个三维因子结构,该结构区分了在家饮酒、在酒吧、餐馆和聚会等社交场合饮酒以及在街角和公园等户外公共场所饮酒。同时方程路径分析被用于建立饮酒情境、重度饮酒频率、饮酒问题、种族和其他社会特征之间的关系模型。所得模型的主要研究结果是,饮酒情境能独立预测饮酒问题,而且种族与饮酒情境或与酒精相关的问题没有直接关联。然而,种族差异确实通过社会经济地位和规范态度的差异,对社交场合和饮酒问题产生显著的间接影响。结论强调了种族和社会特征相互关系的复杂性,这些特征构成了酒精使用的社会模式和情境中明显种族差异的基础。