Associations between unemployment and heavy episodic drinking from adolescence to midlife in Sweden and Finland
Autor: | Pekka Virtanen, Noora Berg, Taina Huurre, Olli Kiviruusu, Anne Hammarström, Tomi Lintonen |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Adolescent Alcohol Drinking media_common.quotation_subject Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences Sex Factors 0302 clinical medicine Social medicine Humans Medicine Longitudinal Studies Prospective Studies 030212 general & internal medicine Finland media_common Subclinical infection Sweden 030505 public health business.industry Age Factors Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Alcoholism Unemployment Cohort Life course approach Female 0305 other medical science business Cohort study Demography |
Zdroj: | European Journal of Public Health. 28:258-263 |
ISSN: | 1464-360X 1101-1262 |
DOI: | 10.1093/eurpub/ckx207 |
Popis: | Background Unemployment and alcohol use have often been found to correlate and to act as risk factors for each other. However, only few studies have examined these associations at longitudinal settings extending over several life phases. Moreover, previous studies have mostly used total consumption or medical diagnoses as the indicator, whereas subclinical measures of harmful alcohol use, such as heavy episodic drinking (HED), have been used rarely. The aim of this study was to examine the associations between HED and unemployment from adolescence to midlife in two Nordic countries. Methods Participants of separate cohort studies from Sweden and Finland were recruited at age 16 in 1981/1983 and followed up at ages 21/22, 30/32 and 43/42, (n = 1080/2194), respectively. Cross-lagged autoregressive models were used to determine associations between HED and unemployment. Results In the Swedish cohort, HED at ages 16 and 30 in men and HED at age 21 in women were associated with subsequent unemployment. In the Finnish cohort, we found corresponding associations at age 16 in women and at age 22 in men. However, the gender differences were not statistically significant. The associations from unemployment to HED were non-significant in both genders, in both cohorts and at all ages. Conclusions Our results suggest that heavy drinkers are more likely to experience unemployment in subsequent years. The associations from HED to unemployment seem to exist through the life course from adolescence to midlife. More emphasis should be put on reducing alcohol related harms in order to improve labour-market outcomes. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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