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1.
Drug Alcohol Depend ; 200: 1-5, 2019 07 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31063887

RÉSUMÉ

We know little about determinants of violence and drug use in Mexican northern cities, places considered to be at high risk for alcohol, drug use, and violence, including crimes and homicides. METHODS: Data are from the US-Mexico Study on Alcohol and Related Conditions (2011-2013), a survey of respondents living in the border metropolitan areas of Nuevo Laredo (n = 828) and Reynosa and Matamoros (n = 821) and in the non-border metropolitan area of Monterrey (n = 811). Associations between violence (interpersonal, direct community [such as physical attack] and indirect community violence [such as heard gunshots]), drug related activities and neighborhood insecurity with alcohol use disorders (AUD), drug misuse (illicit and out of prescription) and area-level disadvantage (ALD) were estimated with multilevel logistic models, controlling for covariates. RESULTS: Substance use was generally related to violence regardless of ALD in these northern cities in Mexico (statistically significant odds ratios range: 0.68-4.24). AUD was associated with 3 forms of violence and also with drug-related activities, but not with neighborhood insecurity. Both illicit drug use and misuse prescription medicines seem to act in unison and were related only to indirect community violence and drug related activities. ALD in these cities was associated with physical violence and neighborhood insecurity. An inverse relationship between illicit drug use and neighborhood insecurity was an unexpected finding. CONCLUSIONS: AUD and drug use were associated with violence and drug involvement regardless of ALD. Neighborhood insecurity depended mainly on ALD and to an inverse relationship with illicit drug use that needs further study.


Sujet(s)
Émigration et immigration , Américain origine mexicaine/psychologie , Facteurs socioéconomiques , Troubles liés à une substance/épidémiologie , Troubles liés à une substance/psychologie , Violence/psychologie , Adulte , Villes/épidémiologie , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Mexique/épidémiologie , Adulte d'âge moyen , Caractéristiques de l'habitat , Classe sociale , Troubles liés à une substance/économie , Enquêtes et questionnaires , États-Unis/épidémiologie , Violence/économie
2.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res ; 41(4): 769-778, 2017 04.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28207949

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: Alcohol consumption patterns on the U.S.-Mexico border and their relationships with DSM-5 alcohol use disorders (AUD) have been understudied. Yet, the effects of drinking by Mexican-origin individuals may differ between cities on versus off the border both in the United States and in Mexico. We characterize prior 12-month drinking patterns and examine their relationships with AUD, in border and off-border cities of Texas and adjacent Mexican states. METHODS: Data come from the U.S.-Mexico Study of Alcohol and Related Conditions involving 2,336 Mexican Americans in Texas and 2,460 Mexicans in bordering states of Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas in Mexico. Drinking pattern was defined as an interaction between volume and maximum amount, or intensity (never vs. ever 5+/4+ [men/women], 8+, and 12+ drinks in a day). DSM-5 AUD was assessed using an adaptation of the Alcohol Section of the World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview core. Separately by gender, 5 logistic regressions models controlling for age were estimated predicting symptoms in 2 or more AUD criteria domains from volume, heavy pattern and, successively, effects of country, and (by country) residing on vs. off the border, or in each of 3 cities/country. RESULTS: A segmentation analysis for Texas males based on rate of experiencing AUD generated several distinct volume groups, each partitioned by an empirically selected maximum, and helped identify a drinking-pattern typology. In gender-stratified models of AUD rates using this typology, adjusting for age, significant volume and intensity effects were seen, more strongly in the United States. Border versus interior differences implied more AUD for given patterns at the border in the United States and the reverse in Mexico, with some city differences also evident. CONCLUSIONS: Drinking-pattern analyses confirm that border proximity may affect drinking problems but in opposite directions in the United States and Mexico, possibly related to economic and psychological stresses specific to respective communities.


Sujet(s)
Consommation d'alcool/ethnologie , Troubles liés à l'alcool/ethnologie , Diagnostic and stastistical manual of mental disorders (USA) , Émigration et immigration , Américain origine mexicaine , Adolescent , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Consommation d'alcool/psychologie , Consommation d'alcool/tendances , Troubles liés à l'alcool/diagnostic , Troubles liés à l'alcool/psychologie , Études transversales , Émigration et immigration/tendances , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Américain origine mexicaine/psychologie , Mexique/ethnologie , Adulte d'âge moyen , Répartition aléatoire , Texas/ethnologie , États-Unis/ethnologie , Jeune adulte
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