Abstract

This study explored bystanders’ willingness to help a friend who flushes when drinking to reduce his/her drinking. Alcohol-related facial flushing is an indicator of an inherited variant enzyme, aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH), that impairs alcohol metabolism and increases drinkers’ lifetime risk of certain aerodigestive cancers. Individuals who flush should reduce their alcohol exposure, but they may continue to drink if social pressures and rules of etiquette make not drinking socially risky. The analysis used data from 2912 undergraduate students from 13 universities in southwestern, central and northeastern China from a survey asking how they respond to someone’s flushing in various scenarios. Latent class analysis grouped students by similar responses to flushing. A multinomial logistic regression explored how class membership was associated with knowledge, drinking status, and reactions to one’s own flushing. Five classes were derived from the latent class analysis, ranging from always intervene to mostly hesitate to help; in between were classes of students who were willing to help in some scenarios and hesitant in other scenarios. Only 11.6% students knew the connection between facial flushing and impaired alcohol metabolism, and knowledgeable students were somewhat more likely to assist when they saw someone flushing. In the absence of knowledge, other factors—such as drinking status, the gender of the bystander, the gender of the person who flushed, and degree of friendship with the person who flushed—determined how willing a person was to help someone reduce or stop drinking. Class membership was predicted by knowledge, gender, drinking status, and reactions to one’s own flushing. Of these 4 factors, knowledge and reactions to one’s own flushing could be influenced through alcohol education programs. It will take some time for alcohol education to catch up to and change social and cultural patterns of drinking. Meanwhile, motivational strategies should be developed to increase the willingness of bystanders to assist friends and to create a social expectation that flushers should stop or reduce their drinking.

Highlights

  • Ethanol-induced facial flushing is a physiological reaction to alcohol consumption in which the drinker’s face and neck turns red

  • This study explored variables that are associated with the willingness to assist a person who flushes while drinking alcohol to drink less or stop drinking

  • Since facial flushing is apparent to others it would be desirable for others to encourage the person who is flushing to stop drinking

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Summary

Introduction

Ethanol-induced facial flushing is a physiological reaction to alcohol consumption in which the drinker’s face and neck turns red. The person whose face flushes may experience other feelings of discomfort, such as an elevated heart rate, headache, heart palpitation, shortness of breath, hyperventilation, low blood pressure, vertigo, nausea, and vomiting [1]. Flushing results from the body’s compromised ability to metabolize alcohol, allowing acetaldehyde to build up, which increases a person’s risk of cancers of the respiratory tract and upper digestive tract, including the lips, mouth, tongue, nose, throat, and vocal cords [2]. Individuals with the ALDH2*1 gene typically flush when drinking, and they tend to have compromised alcohol metabolism with the. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 850; doi:10.3390/ijerph15050850 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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