A latent class analysis of alcohol-related problems among adults who drank in the past year

JOURNAL OF SUBSTANCE USE(2023)

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Abstract
BackgroundResearch on alcohol-related problems often examines individual problem types in isolation or uses scales that provide a single cumulative severity score for alcohol-related harms. This study aims to assess the patterns of seventeen distinct alcohol-related problems and how they co-occur.MethodsThe East Bay Neighborhood Study surveyed a community sample of 864 adults who drank in the past year in Alameda County, California. Participants reported if they experienced each of seventeen alcohol-related problems in the last year. Latent class analysis assessed subgroups of problems. Logistic regression models examined associations between class membership, sociodemographics, and alcohol use.ResultsA two-class model best fit the data. The multiple problems class (18% of respondents) was characterized by experiencing problems of all types and almost all experiences of legal, violence, and risky sex-related problems. The none/few problems class (82%) was characterized by a low prevalence of all problem types, with only a small proportion experiencing hangovers. In adjusted models, only older age (AOR = 0.90, 95% CI = 0.88-0.92) had lower odds of multiple problems class membership.ConclusionsNumerous alcohol-related problems co-occurred within a small subgroup of people who drank in the last year, while the majority experienced few problems. Results suggest that focusing on singular alcohol-related problems may overlook patterns of concurrent problems in high-risk groups.
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Key words
latent class analysis,adults,alcohol-related
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