Alcohol consumption and health status of family members: Health impacts without ingestion

Background: Over several decades, many cohort studies from the medical epidemiology literature have observed that compared with abstainers, moderate drinkers experience lower risk for a range of diseases. It was very difficult to separate the hypothesised physiological protective effect of moderate...

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Main Authors: Liang, Wenbin, Chikritzhs, Tanya
Format: Journal Article
Published: Blackwell Publishing 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23765
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author Liang, Wenbin
Chikritzhs, Tanya
author_facet Liang, Wenbin
Chikritzhs, Tanya
author_sort Liang, Wenbin
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: Over several decades, many cohort studies from the medical epidemiology literature have observed that compared with abstainers, moderate drinkers experience lower risk for a range of diseases. It was very difficult to separate the hypothesised physiological protective effect of moderate drinking from its well-correlated confounders in observational study settings. Aims: To investigate the association between current alcohol consumption levels of randomly selected family members and the current self-reported health status of other members living within the same family, using a large-scale representative general population survey. Method: Poisson regression models of the association between randomly selected key respondent alcohol consumption and health status of cohabiting family members using data from the 2008, 2009 and 2010 National Health Interview Surveys. Self-reported alcohol consumption of randomly selected key participants and self-reported health status of adult and child (parent reported) family members living in the same household were measured and compared. Results: After controlling for a large range of commonly reported confounders, inverse associations were evident between light and moderate alcohol consumption of key participants and the prevalence of adverse health status among their family members, including children. Conclusions: The superior health status attributed to family members of light and moderate drinkers is highly likely to be spurious and due to residual confounding rather than physiologically protective effects of alcohol. Unaccounted for confounding is likely to underpin apparent ‘protective effects’ due to moderate drinking commonly reported from observational studies of all-cause mortality, heart disease, stroke and other chronic diseases.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-237652018-03-29T09:06:48Z Alcohol consumption and health status of family members: Health impacts without ingestion Liang, Wenbin Chikritzhs, Tanya chronic disease confounders alcohol epidemiology Background: Over several decades, many cohort studies from the medical epidemiology literature have observed that compared with abstainers, moderate drinkers experience lower risk for a range of diseases. It was very difficult to separate the hypothesised physiological protective effect of moderate drinking from its well-correlated confounders in observational study settings. Aims: To investigate the association between current alcohol consumption levels of randomly selected family members and the current self-reported health status of other members living within the same family, using a large-scale representative general population survey. Method: Poisson regression models of the association between randomly selected key respondent alcohol consumption and health status of cohabiting family members using data from the 2008, 2009 and 2010 National Health Interview Surveys. Self-reported alcohol consumption of randomly selected key participants and self-reported health status of adult and child (parent reported) family members living in the same household were measured and compared. Results: After controlling for a large range of commonly reported confounders, inverse associations were evident between light and moderate alcohol consumption of key participants and the prevalence of adverse health status among their family members, including children. Conclusions: The superior health status attributed to family members of light and moderate drinkers is highly likely to be spurious and due to residual confounding rather than physiologically protective effects of alcohol. Unaccounted for confounding is likely to underpin apparent ‘protective effects’ due to moderate drinking commonly reported from observational studies of all-cause mortality, heart disease, stroke and other chronic diseases. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23765 10.1111/imj.12041 Blackwell Publishing restricted
spellingShingle chronic disease
confounders
alcohol
epidemiology
Liang, Wenbin
Chikritzhs, Tanya
Alcohol consumption and health status of family members: Health impacts without ingestion
title Alcohol consumption and health status of family members: Health impacts without ingestion
title_full Alcohol consumption and health status of family members: Health impacts without ingestion
title_fullStr Alcohol consumption and health status of family members: Health impacts without ingestion
title_full_unstemmed Alcohol consumption and health status of family members: Health impacts without ingestion
title_short Alcohol consumption and health status of family members: Health impacts without ingestion
title_sort alcohol consumption and health status of family members: health impacts without ingestion
topic chronic disease
confounders
alcohol
epidemiology
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23765