Socioeconomic inequalities in alcohol-related harm in adolescents: a prospective cohort study of 68,299 Danish 15-19-year-olds

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Socioeconomic inequalities in alcohol-related harm in adolescents : a prospective cohort study of 68,299 Danish 15-19-year-olds. / Tolstrup, Janne S; Kruckow, Sofie; Becker, Ulrik; Andersen, Ove; Sawyer, Susan M; Katikireddi, Srinivasa Vittal; Møller, Sanne Pagh.

I: EClinicalMedicine, Bind 62, 102129, 2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Tolstrup, JS, Kruckow, S, Becker, U, Andersen, O, Sawyer, SM, Katikireddi, SV & Møller, SP 2023, 'Socioeconomic inequalities in alcohol-related harm in adolescents: a prospective cohort study of 68,299 Danish 15-19-year-olds', EClinicalMedicine, bind 62, 102129. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102129

APA

Tolstrup, J. S., Kruckow, S., Becker, U., Andersen, O., Sawyer, S. M., Katikireddi, S. V., & Møller, S. P. (2023). Socioeconomic inequalities in alcohol-related harm in adolescents: a prospective cohort study of 68,299 Danish 15-19-year-olds. EClinicalMedicine, 62, [102129]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102129

Vancouver

Tolstrup JS, Kruckow S, Becker U, Andersen O, Sawyer SM, Katikireddi SV o.a. Socioeconomic inequalities in alcohol-related harm in adolescents: a prospective cohort study of 68,299 Danish 15-19-year-olds. EClinicalMedicine. 2023;62. 102129. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102129

Author

Tolstrup, Janne S ; Kruckow, Sofie ; Becker, Ulrik ; Andersen, Ove ; Sawyer, Susan M ; Katikireddi, Srinivasa Vittal ; Møller, Sanne Pagh. / Socioeconomic inequalities in alcohol-related harm in adolescents : a prospective cohort study of 68,299 Danish 15-19-year-olds. I: EClinicalMedicine. 2023 ; Bind 62.

Bibtex

@article{b0a19c7106b6467d89784f3213cc7f1c,
title = "Socioeconomic inequalities in alcohol-related harm in adolescents: a prospective cohort study of 68,299 Danish 15-19-year-olds",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Evidence shows that similar levels of alcohol consumption lead to greater harm in adults with low socioeconomic position (SEP) compared to high SEP. We investigated if SEP is associated with alcohol-related hospital contacts in adolescents, and whether differences in risk can be explained by differences in levels of alcohol consumption, drinking pattern, and substance use.METHODS: This is a prospective cohort study of 68,299 participants aged 15-19 years old from the Danish National Youth Cohort 2014. SEP was operationalised as parent educational level, family income and perceived financial strain in the family. Data were linked to national registers and participants were followed up for five years from 2014 to 2019. Outcomes were hospital contacts due to alcohol. Multilevel Poisson regression was used to estimate incidence rates (IR) and incidence rate ratios (IRR).FINDINGS: During 280,010 person years of follow-up, 872 participants had an alcohol-attributable hospital contact; intoxications (n = 778, 89%) were the most common diagnosis. Low as compared to high SEP was associated with higher IRR of alcohol-attributable hospital contacts for all three SEP measures. The adjusted IRR of harm was 1.73 (95% CI: 1.29-2.33) for elementary school as the highest parent education compared to longer parent education and 1.57 (95% CI: 1.30-1.89) for family financial strain compared to those without financial strain. Adjustment for weekly alcohol intake, drinking pattern and substance use did not substantially change results. Cubic spline analysis of the association between family income and alcohol-attributable hospital contacts revealed a dose-response relationship with decreasing risk of alcohol-related harm with higher income.INTERPRETATION: Our findings suggested that alcohol-related harm is more common in socioeconomically disadvantaged adolescents despite similar levels of alcohol consumption, regardless of differences in drinking pattern or substance use. Future preventive strategies should prioritise young adolescents, including those who are most disadvantaged.FUNDING: Tryg Foundation (ID: 153539).",
author = "Tolstrup, {Janne S} and Sofie Kruckow and Ulrik Becker and Ove Andersen and Sawyer, {Susan M} and Katikireddi, {Srinivasa Vittal} and M{\o}ller, {Sanne Pagh}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2023 The Authors.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102129",
language = "English",
volume = "62",
journal = "EClinicalMedicine",
issn = "2589-5370",
publisher = "The Lancet Publishing Group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Socioeconomic inequalities in alcohol-related harm in adolescents

T2 - a prospective cohort study of 68,299 Danish 15-19-year-olds

AU - Tolstrup, Janne S

AU - Kruckow, Sofie

AU - Becker, Ulrik

AU - Andersen, Ove

AU - Sawyer, Susan M

AU - Katikireddi, Srinivasa Vittal

AU - Møller, Sanne Pagh

N1 - © 2023 The Authors.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - BACKGROUND: Evidence shows that similar levels of alcohol consumption lead to greater harm in adults with low socioeconomic position (SEP) compared to high SEP. We investigated if SEP is associated with alcohol-related hospital contacts in adolescents, and whether differences in risk can be explained by differences in levels of alcohol consumption, drinking pattern, and substance use.METHODS: This is a prospective cohort study of 68,299 participants aged 15-19 years old from the Danish National Youth Cohort 2014. SEP was operationalised as parent educational level, family income and perceived financial strain in the family. Data were linked to national registers and participants were followed up for five years from 2014 to 2019. Outcomes were hospital contacts due to alcohol. Multilevel Poisson regression was used to estimate incidence rates (IR) and incidence rate ratios (IRR).FINDINGS: During 280,010 person years of follow-up, 872 participants had an alcohol-attributable hospital contact; intoxications (n = 778, 89%) were the most common diagnosis. Low as compared to high SEP was associated with higher IRR of alcohol-attributable hospital contacts for all three SEP measures. The adjusted IRR of harm was 1.73 (95% CI: 1.29-2.33) for elementary school as the highest parent education compared to longer parent education and 1.57 (95% CI: 1.30-1.89) for family financial strain compared to those without financial strain. Adjustment for weekly alcohol intake, drinking pattern and substance use did not substantially change results. Cubic spline analysis of the association between family income and alcohol-attributable hospital contacts revealed a dose-response relationship with decreasing risk of alcohol-related harm with higher income.INTERPRETATION: Our findings suggested that alcohol-related harm is more common in socioeconomically disadvantaged adolescents despite similar levels of alcohol consumption, regardless of differences in drinking pattern or substance use. Future preventive strategies should prioritise young adolescents, including those who are most disadvantaged.FUNDING: Tryg Foundation (ID: 153539).

AB - BACKGROUND: Evidence shows that similar levels of alcohol consumption lead to greater harm in adults with low socioeconomic position (SEP) compared to high SEP. We investigated if SEP is associated with alcohol-related hospital contacts in adolescents, and whether differences in risk can be explained by differences in levels of alcohol consumption, drinking pattern, and substance use.METHODS: This is a prospective cohort study of 68,299 participants aged 15-19 years old from the Danish National Youth Cohort 2014. SEP was operationalised as parent educational level, family income and perceived financial strain in the family. Data were linked to national registers and participants were followed up for five years from 2014 to 2019. Outcomes were hospital contacts due to alcohol. Multilevel Poisson regression was used to estimate incidence rates (IR) and incidence rate ratios (IRR).FINDINGS: During 280,010 person years of follow-up, 872 participants had an alcohol-attributable hospital contact; intoxications (n = 778, 89%) were the most common diagnosis. Low as compared to high SEP was associated with higher IRR of alcohol-attributable hospital contacts for all three SEP measures. The adjusted IRR of harm was 1.73 (95% CI: 1.29-2.33) for elementary school as the highest parent education compared to longer parent education and 1.57 (95% CI: 1.30-1.89) for family financial strain compared to those without financial strain. Adjustment for weekly alcohol intake, drinking pattern and substance use did not substantially change results. Cubic spline analysis of the association between family income and alcohol-attributable hospital contacts revealed a dose-response relationship with decreasing risk of alcohol-related harm with higher income.INTERPRETATION: Our findings suggested that alcohol-related harm is more common in socioeconomically disadvantaged adolescents despite similar levels of alcohol consumption, regardless of differences in drinking pattern or substance use. Future preventive strategies should prioritise young adolescents, including those who are most disadvantaged.FUNDING: Tryg Foundation (ID: 153539).

U2 - 10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102129

DO - 10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102129

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37576460

VL - 62

JO - EClinicalMedicine

JF - EClinicalMedicine

SN - 2589-5370

M1 - 102129

ER -

ID: 394442591