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. 2019 Nov 26;16(11):e1002954.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002954. eCollection 2019 Nov.

Heavy and binge alcohol drinking and parenting status in the United States from 2006 to 2018: An analysis of nationally representative cross-sectional surveys

Affiliations

Heavy and binge alcohol drinking and parenting status in the United States from 2006 to 2018: An analysis of nationally representative cross-sectional surveys

Sarah McKetta et al. PLoS Med. .

Abstract

Background: Binge and heavy drinking are preventable causes of mortality and morbidity. Alcohol consumption by women who parent is damaging to child health, and it is concerning that women in the United States in their reproductive years have experienced increased drinking over the past decade. Although media attention has focused on the drinking status of women who are child-rearing, it remains unclear whether binge and heavy drinking vary by parenting status and sex.

Methods and findings: We examined national trends in binge drinking, defined as 5 or more drinks in a single day for men and 4 or more drinks for women, and heavy drinking, defined as 60 or more days with binge episodes in a year. We used survey-weighted logistic regression from the 2006-2018 waves of the cross-sectional National Health Interview Survey (NHIS, N = 239,944 eligible respondents) to study time trends in drinking outcomes by sex, age, and parenting status. Binge drinking increased for both sexes in nearly all age groups, with the largest increase among women ages 30-44 without children (from 21% reporting binge drinking in 2006 to 42% in 2018); the exception was young men (ages 18-29) with children, among whom binge drinking declined. By 2012, the prevalence of binge drinking among young men with children (38.5%) declined to below that of young women without children (39.2%) and stayed lower thereafter. Despite widespread increases in binge drinking, heavy drinking declined or remained stable for all groups except older women (ages 45-55) without children (odds ratio [OR] for heavy drinking each year = 1.06, 95% CI 1.02-1.10) and women ages 30-44, regardless of parenting status. For binge drinking outcomes only, we saw evidence of interaction in drinking trends by parenting status, but this was shown to be confounded by sex and age. Men and women with children reported consistently lower levels of drinking than those without children. Rates of abstention mirrored trends in binge outcomes for both sexes, limiting concerns about invariance. Study limitations include self-reported data and measurement invariance in binge drinking cutoffs across study years.

Conclusions: This study demonstrated that trends in binge and heavy drinking over time were not differential by parenting status for women; rather, declines and increases over time were mainly attributable to sex and age. Women both with and without children are increasing binge and heavy drinking; men, regardless of parenting status, and women without children consumed more alcohol than women with children. Regardless of impact on child health, increased drinking rates in the past decade are concerning for adult morbidity and mortality: binge drinking has increased among both sexes, and heavy drinking has increased among older women. Men and women of all ages and parenting status should be screened for heavy alcohol use and referred to specialty care as appropriate.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Proportion of respondents with children in the home from 2006 to 2018, with trend lines.
Counterclockwise from top: (A) proportion of respondents with children in the home, all strata; (B) proportion of men with children in the home, by age; (C) proportion of women with children in the home, by age. With adjustment for race and poverty status, OR for having children at home was stable over time across unstratified respondents (OR = 0.99, p = 0.34). OR, odds ratio.
Fig 2
Fig 2. Predicted probabilities of past-year binge drinking.
From left: predicted probabilities for respondents ages 18–29, ages 30–44, and ages 45–55. Black lines represent men, red lines represent women, dotted line denotes no children, and solid line denotes children. Note: predicted probabilities derived from 4-way logistic regression interaction model; figures fixed at white race and highest income level.
Fig 3
Fig 3. Predicted probabilities of past-year heavy drinking.
From left: predicted probabilities for respondents ages 18–29, ages 30–44, and ages 45–55. Black lines represent men, red lines represent women, dotted line denotes no children, and solid line denotes children. Note: predicted probabilities derived from 4-way logistic regression interaction model; figures fixed at white race and highest income level. Heavy drinking defined as 60 or more days of binge drinking in the past year.
Fig 4
Fig 4. Predicted probabilities of past-year abstaining from drinking.
From left: predicted probabilities for respondents ages 18–29, ages 30–44, and ages 45–55. Black lines represent men, red lines represent women, dotted line denotes no children, and solid line denotes children. Note: predicted probabilities derived from 4-way logistic regression interaction model; figures fixed at white race and highest income level.

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