Abstract

Although sexual orientation-related alcohol use disparities are well established, researchers have not identified whether disparities are diminishing as societal attitudes towards lesbian/gay and bisexual (LGB) people become more accepting. We examined changes in four alcohol-related disparities between heterosexual and LGB youth from 1998 to 2013 by (1) estimating the prevalence of these behaviors; (2) estimating disparities in alcohol-related outcomes between heterosexual and LGB youth within each wave year; and (3) testing whether the degree of difference in alcohol-related disparities between heterosexual and LGB youth has changed. Logistic regression models and year×sexual orientation interactions with repeated, cross-sectional, provincially representative data. British Columbia, Canada. Students (ages 12-19) from the 1998 (n=22 858), 2003 (n=29 323), 2008 (n=25 254) and 2013 (n=21 938) British Columbia Adolescent Health Survey (total n=99 373, 48.7% male, mean age=14.84). We modeled age-adjusted differences in life-time alcohol use, age of onset, past 30-day drinking and past 30-day heavy episodic drinking between heterosexual and three subgroups of sexual minority youth (i.e. mostly heterosexual, bisexual and lesbian/gay). Generally, alcohol use declined for all youth, although less so among LGB youth [average adjusted odds ratio (aOR)=0.58 and aOR=0.53 for heterosexual males and females and aOR=0.71 and aOR=0.57 for sexual minority males and females, respectively). Within-year comparisons demonstrated elevated rates of alcohol use among LGB compared with heterosexual youth for each of the four survey years, especially among females. Findings indicate few changes over time; however, results show an increase in risky alcohol use from 1998 to 2013 among mostly heterosexual (aOR=1.58 for life-time alcohol use, aOR=1.58 for 30-day alcohol use and aOR=1.34 for 30-day heavy episodic drinking), and bisexual (aOR=1.95 for life-time alcohol use) females. Despite the general decline in the prevalence of alcohol use among young people in Canada since 1998, lesbian/gay and bisexual youth in Canada continue to show elevated rates of alcohol use compared with heterosexual youth.

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