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Neighbourhood context and binge drinking from adolescence into early adulthood in a US national cohort.
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- المؤلفون: Fairman, Brian J1 (AUTHOR) ; Goldstein, Risë B1 (AUTHOR); Simons-Morton, Bruce G1 (AUTHOR); Haynie, Denise L1 (AUTHOR); Liu, Danping2 (AUTHOR); Hingson, Ralph W3 (AUTHOR); Gilman, Stephen E1,4 (AUTHOR)
- المصدر:
International Journal of Epidemiology. Feb2020, Vol. 49 Issue 1, p103-112. 10p.
- الموضوع:
- معلومة اضافية
- الموضوع:
- نبذة مختصرة :
Background: Underage binge drinking is a serious health concern that is likely influenced by the neighbourhood environment. However, longitudinal evidence has been limited and few studies have examined time-varying neighbourhood factors and demographic subgroup variation.Methods: We investigated neighbourhood influences and binge drinking in a national cohort of US 10th grade students at four times (2010-2014; n = 2745). We estimated odds ratios (OR) for past 30-day binge drinking associated with neighbourhood disadvantage, personal and property crime (quartiles), and number of liquor, beer and wine stores within 5 km, and then evaluated whether neighbourhood associations differ by age, sex and race/ethnicity.Results: Neighbourhood disadvantage was associated with binge drinking before 18 [OR = 1.54; 95% confidence interval (1.14, 2.08)], but not after 18 years of age. Property crime in neighbourhoods was associated with a higher odds of binge drinking [OR = 1.54 (0.96, 2.45)], an association that was stronger in early adulthood [4th vs 1st quartile: OR = 1.77 (1.04, 3.03)] and among Whites [4th vs 1st quartile: OR = 2.46 (1.03, 5.90)]. Higher density of liquor stores predicted binge drinking among Blacks [1-10 stores vs none: OR = 4.31 (1.50, 12.36)] whereas higher density of beer/wine stores predicted binge drinking among Whites [one vs none for beer: OR = 2.21 (1.06, 4.60); for wine: OR = 2.04 (1.04, 4.03)].Conclusions: Neighbourhood conditions, particularly those related to economic circumstances, crime and alcohol outlet density, were related to binge drinking among young adults, but associations varied across age and individual characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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