社会不平等和物质使用和问题赌博在青少年和年轻人:在德国流行病学调查的回顾。

D. Henkel, U. Zemlin
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引用次数: 26

摘要

目前的审查概述了德国关于青少年(11-17岁)和年轻人(18-25岁)中成瘾行为(吸烟、酗酒和危险饮酒、大麻和其他非法药物的消费、处方药的非医疗使用和有问题的赌博)流行程度的社会流行病学研究,并区分了不同的社会经济地位(SES)指标(上学类型、家庭富裕程度、父母职业状况、父母的社会经济地位、就业状况)和移民背景。作者评估了2002年至2012年间进行的10项全国性调查和1项区域调查的数据,其中包括不同的样本。这段时间内的趋势表明,在德国,吸烟、酗酒、使用大麻或其他非法药物的青少年比例在调查期间普遍下降。然而,研究结果表明,社会不平等与药物使用的普遍程度之间仍然存在一些强烈的联系。详细的结果汇总在12个表格中。主要结果如下:1)低社会经济地位(学校类型,就业状况)始终与更多的吸烟相关,并且,在可获得此类数据的地方,这种模式在男性和女性中都观察到。2)在家庭富裕程度方面,两项调查显示,与FAS高的男孩相比,FAS低和中等的男孩有酗酒经历的可能性明显更低。有问题的酒精使用和父母的社会经济地位之间没有明显的联系,并不是所有的调查结果都表明酗酒在高学历学生中更为普遍。就业状况与性别差异有关;与同龄的男同性恋学生(中学/文法学校)相比,有问题的饮酒模式在年轻失业男性中更为普遍。女性的情况正好相反。另一个一致的发现是,在具有土耳其/亚洲移民背景的青少年和年轻人中,与没有移民背景的同龄青少年和年轻人相比,有问题地使用酒精的情况要少得多。3)在大麻消费方面,失业人员和低教育水平的学生(“Hauptschule”)成为高危人群。(4)问题赌博的研究结果与国际上的研究结果有明显的重叠和反映:男性、低文化程度、失业、接受社会福利和移民背景显著增加了问题赌博习惯的风险。5)受教育程度低的学生终生非法药物(大麻除外)使用率最高。应当指出,除了学校类型之外,迄今为止还没有审查其他社会经济状况指标。该审查总结了差距和未来的研究领域,并提出了对预防行动的若干影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social Inequality and Substance Use and Problematic Gambling Among Adolescents and Young Adults: A Review of Epidemiological Surveys in Germany.
The current review provides an overview of socioepidemiological research in Germany about the prevalence of addictive behaviours (smoking, binge and hazardous drinking, consumption of cannabis and other illegal drugs, the non-medical use of prescription drugs and problematic gambling) among adolescents (11-17 years) and young adults (18-25 years), also differentiating between different socioeconomic status (SES) indicators (attended school type, family affluence, parental occupational status, parental SES, employment status) and migration background. The authors evaluated data from ten national surveys and one regional survey conducted between 2002 and 2012, which included different samples. The trends over this time frame reveal that the proportion of adolescents who smoke tobacco, show problematic patterns of alcohol consumption, use cannabis or other illegal drugs has generally declined over the investigated time span in Germany. The results nevertheless suggest that some strong associations still exist between social inequalities and the prevalence of substance use. The detailed results are summarised in twelve tables. The main results are as follows: 1) Low SES (school type, employment status) was consistently associated with more cigarette smoking, and, where such data was available, this pattern was observed in both males and females. 2) With regard to family affluence, two surveys show that boys with low and middle FAS are significantly less likely to have binge drinking experience compared to boys with high FAS. There were no significant associations between problematic alcohol use and parental SES, and not all results of the surveys show that binge drinking is more prevalent among HS-students. Employment status was associated with gender differences; problematic patterns of alcohol consumption were significantly more prevalent among young unemployed males compared to GY-students (secondary high school/grammar school) of the same age. The opposite was true for females. Another consistent finding was that among adolescents and young adults with a Turkish/Asian migration background, a problematic use of alcohol was significantly less common compared to adolescents and young adults of the same age without a migration background. 3) In terms of the consumption of cannabis, the unemployed and students with low educational level ('Hauptschule´) emerge as high-risk groups. 4) The results concerning problematic gambling significantly overlap with and reflect the findings of international research: being male, of low educational attainment, unemployed, receiving social welfare, and having a migration background significantly increased the risk of problematic gambling habits. 5) The highest lifetime prevalence rates for the consumption of illegal drugs (other than cannabis) were observed among students with low educational level. It should be noted that other SES indicators, in addition to school type, have not been examined to date. The review concludes by outlining gaps and future research areas, as well as presenting several implications for prevention initiatives.
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