Abstract
BackgroundResearch has consistently shown that early onset of drinking (EOD) is associated with alcohol-related problems in adulthood. However, recent reviews have identified several limitations in the early onset literature, including the use of retrospective reports, insufficient control for potential confounders, ambiguous definitions of the concept, and an assumption that early onset is independent of cultural norms and national alcohol policies. This study addresses these limitations by examining whether EOD, independent of early onset of excessive drinking (EOE), prospectively predicts hazardous drinking in late adolescence/young adulthood in Norway and Australia, two countries with different drinking cultures.MethodsData were drawn from two population-based longitudinal studies; the Norwegian Tracking Opportunities and Problems Study (n = 329) and the Australian International Youth Development Study (n = 786). Data were collected prospectively from mid adolescence (14–16 years) to late adolescence/young adulthood (18–25 years) and a modified Poisson regression approach was used to estimate prevalence ratios. Adolescent self-reports included measures of EOD and EOE. Young adults completed the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT). The results were adjusted for adolescent factors; age, gender, impulsivity, hyperactivity, conduct problems, smoking, early sexual intercourse and friends’ substance use, and family factors; alcohol and drug use in the family, maternal education, family management and monitoring.ResultsHazardous drinking was identified in 46.8 and 38.9% of young adults in Norway and Australia, respectively. Both EOD and EOE in adolescence were significantly related to an increased risk of alcohol-related problems in late adolescence/young adulthood in both studies, even when adjusting for possible confounders.ConclusionOur findings indicate that adolescent drinking behaviour is an indicator of alcohol-related problems in late adolescence/young adulthood, even when controlling for a variety of covariates. This finding is in contrast to previous research on older adults, where no association between adolescent drinking and later alcohol-related problems were found when controlling for covariates. The divergence in findings may suggest that the impact of EOD/EOE is limited to the late adolescent and young adult period. Preventing drinking in early adolescence may thus have some impact on the drinking patterns in late adolescence/young adulthood.
Highlights
Research has consistently shown that early onset of drinking (EOD) is associated with alcohol-related problems in adulthood
The divergence in findings may suggest that the impact of EOD/early onset of excessive drinking (EOE) is limited to the late adolescent and young adult period
This study addresses several limitations of most previous research by examining (a) whether EOD (14–16 years) prospectively predicts risk of alcohol-related problems in late adolescence/young adulthood (18–25 years), (b) whether this relationship remains upon adjustment for a comprehensive number of covariates that may function as confounders, (c) whether early onset of more than a few sips of alcohol is predictive of later alcohol problems or whether only the consumption of more excessive amounts of alcohol in early age is related to such risk, and (d) whether relationships between EOD and subsequent risk of alcohol-related problems are similar in samples drawn from two different countries with different alcohol policies and drinking cultures
Summary
Research has consistently shown that early onset of drinking (EOD) is associated with alcohol-related problems in adulthood. Recent reviews have identified several limitations in the early onset literature, including the use of retrospective reports, insufficient control for potential confounders, ambiguous definitions of the concept, and an assumption that early onset is independent of cultural norms and national alcohol policies. This study addresses these limitations by examining whether EOD, independent of early onset of excessive drinking (EOE), prospectively predicts hazardous drinking in late adolescence/young adulthood in Norway and Australia, two countries with different drinking cultures. Such factors are potential confounders, as they may reflect shared vulnerability to both early onset and adult alcohol-related problems
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