性少数群体和异性恋同龄人中心理困扰和酒精使用模式的关联。

Carolyn K Tran, Rebecca L Casarez, Angela J Nash, J Michael Wilkerson, Stanley Cron
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:关于老年人性取向相关差异及其与酒精使用关系的研究有限。目的:本研究的目的是确定性少数身份是否能调节心理困扰与饮酒模式之间的关系。方法:本研究对2017-2018年全国药物使用与健康调查数据进行二次分析。采用单变量分析和逻辑回归对50岁及以上的女同性恋、男同性恋和双性恋(LGB)老年人(N = 462)与异性恋(N = 16,856)的健康结果进行比较。相互作用项评估性取向对心理困扰和饮酒的影响。结果:性取向是过去一年、过去一个月和任何时间酒精使用的预测因子(p < 0.001),但不是酒精依赖或滥用、酗酒或重度饮酒的预测因子。与同性恋者相比,年长的异性恋者饮酒的可能性更小。没有报告心理困扰的受访者不太可能参与有问题的饮酒。然而,没有证据表明性少数身份会缓和心理困扰和酒精使用之间的关系。结论:有限的证据支持性少数群体的酒精使用率和酒精相关问题高于异性恋者。使用性取向和心理困扰作为相互作用项,酒精使用的预测模型并没有得到改善。未来的研究应该检查老年LGB人群健康受损的潜在原因。这些发现应该用于研究预防和减少酒精滥用的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Associations of Psychological Distress and Alcohol Use Patterns Among Older Adults of Sexual Minority Status and Heterosexual Peers.

Background: There is limited research investigating sexual-orientation-related differences in older adults and their relationship with alcohol use.

Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine if sexual minority status moderates the relationship between psychological distress and alcohol drinking patterns.

Methods: This study was a secondary analysis of data from the 2017-2018 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. Health outcomes among lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) older adults (N = 462) aged 50 years or older were compared with heterosexual (N = 16,856) peers using univariate analyses and logistic regressions. Interaction terms evaluated the influence of sexual orientation on psychological distress and alcohol consumption.

Results: Sexual orientation was a predictor of alcohol use in the past year, past month, and at any time (p < .001) but was not a predictor of alcohol dependence or misuse, binge drinking, or heavy drinking. Heterosexual older adults were less likely to consume alcohol than those who identified as LGB. Respondents not reporting psychological distress were less likely to engage in problematic drinking. However, there was no evidence that sexual minority status moderates the relationship between psychological distress and alcohol use.

Conclusion: Limited evidence supports higher rates of alcohol use and alcohol-related problems among sexual minority persons than heterosexuals. Prediction models for alcohol use were not improved by using sexual orientation and psychological distress as interaction terms. Future research should examine the underlying causes of impaired health in the older LGB population. Those findings should be used to research methods of preventing and minimizing alcohol misuse.

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