The socioeconomic profile of alcohol use in Europe: findings from 33 European countries

IF 1 Q4 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
C. Kilian, J. Manthey, J. Moskalewicz, F. Braddick, S. Matrai, H. López-Pelayo, J. Rehm
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Alcohol’s detrimental health effects do not affect everyone equally but accumulate in people with low socioeconomic status (SES). Using data from the 2021 Standard European Alcohol Survey, we explore gender- and SES-specific consumption patterns, and COVID-19 related changes in consumption across Europe. Methods: Cross-sectional population-based survey data from 54,354 adults from 33 European countries plus Spain-Catalonia were analysed. Five alcohol indicators were of interest: prevalence of past-year alcohol use; and, among past-year alcohol users, prevalence of monthly/more frequent risky-single-occasion-drinking (monthly+ RSOD); prevalence of high-risk alcohol use (40+/60+ grams pure alcohol daily for women/men); mean daily grams of pure alcohol consumed; and self-reported consumption changes during COVID-19. Alcohol indicators were age-standardised and decomposed by gender and SES (education attainment), and analysed using regression models with location-specific random intercepts. Results: Across jurisdictions, past-year alcohol use, monthly+ RSOD, and high-risk drinking were all commonly reported, with distinct gender-specific socioeconomic profiles. While high-SES men and women were generally more likely to report past-year alcohol use, monthly+ RSOD and high-risk drinking were more prevalent among currently drinking low/mid-SES compared to high-SES men. No such SES differences in risky drinking were observed among women, however, female alcohol users with high SES reported higher mean daily drinking levels. High-SES women but not men were more likely to both increase and decrease their drinking during COVID-19 compared to their low/mid-SES counterparts. Conclusion: High consumption levels and distinct socioeconomic profiles among men and women highlight the need for effective alcohol policies to reduce health inequalities in Europe.
欧洲酒精使用的社会经济概况:来自33个欧洲国家的调查结果
背景:酒精对健康的有害影响并不是平等地影响每个人,而是在社会经济地位低的人身上累积。利用2021年欧洲标准酒精调查的数据,我们探索了欧洲特定性别和SES的消费模式,以及与新冠肺炎相关的消费变化。方法:对来自33个欧洲国家和西班牙加泰罗尼亚的54354名成年人的横断面人群调查数据进行分析。五项酒精指标令人感兴趣:去年饮酒的流行率;以及,在过去一年的酒精使用者中,每月/更频繁的单次危险饮酒的流行率(每月+RSOD);高风险饮酒的流行率(女性/男性每天40+/60+克纯酒精);平均每日饮酒克数;以及新冠肺炎期间自我报告的消费变化。酒精指标是年龄标准化的,并按性别和SES(教育程度)进行分解,并使用具有特定地点随机截距的回归模型进行分析。结果:在各个司法管辖区,过去一年的饮酒、每月+RSOD和高风险饮酒都是常见的报告,具有不同的性别特定的社会经济特征。虽然社会经济地位高的男性和女性通常更有可能报告过去一年的饮酒情况,但与社会经济地位较高的男性相比,目前饮酒的社会经济地位低/中等的男性每月+RSOD和高风险饮酒更为普遍。女性在危险饮酒方面没有观察到这种SES差异,然而,SES高的女性饮酒者报告的平均每日饮酒水平更高。与社会经济地位低/中等的女性相比,在新冠肺炎期间,高社会经济地位女性(而非男性)更有可能增加和减少饮酒。结论:男性和女性的高消费水平和不同的社会经济状况突出表明,需要有效的酒精政策来减少欧洲的健康不平等。
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CiteScore
2.40
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