La Trobe

Children’s experience of physical harms and exposure to family violence from others’ drinking in nine societies

journal contribution
posted on 2025-04-17, 05:45 authored by Anne-Marie LaslettAnne-Marie Laslett, Oliver Stanesby, Kathryn Graham, Sarah CallinanSarah Callinan, Katherine J Karriker-Jaffe, Sharon Wilsnack, Sandra KuntscheSandra Kuntsche, Orratai Waleewong, Thomas K Greenfield, Gerhard Gmel, Ramon Florenzano, Siri Hettige, Latsamy Siengsounthone, Ingrid WilsonIngrid Wilson, Angela TaftAngela Taft, Robin RoomRobin Room

Aim: To study caregiver reports of children’s experience of physical harm and exposure to family violence due to others’ drinking in nine societies, assess the relationship of harm with household drinking pattern and evaluate whether gender and education of caregiver affect these relationships.

Method: Using data on adult caregivers from the Gender and Alcohol’s Harm to Others (GENAHTO) project, child alcohol-related injuries and exposure of children to alcohol-related violence (CAIV) rates are estimated by country and pooled using meta-analysis and stratified by gender of the caregiver. Households with and without heavy or harmful drinker(s) (HHDs) are compared to assess the interaction of caregiver gender on the relationship between reporting HHD and CAIV, adjusting for caregiver education and age. Additionally, the relationship between caregiver education and CAIV is analyzed with meta-regression.

Results: The prevalence of CAIV varied across societies, with an overall pooled mean of 4% reported by caregivers. HHD was a consistent correlate of CAIV in all countries. Men and women in the sample reported similar levels of CAIV overall, but the relationship between HHD and CAIV was greater for women than for men, especially if the HHD was the most harmful drinker (MHD). Education was not significantly associated with CAIV.

Conclusions: One in 25 caregivers with children report physical or family violence harms to children because of others’ drinking. The adjusted odds of harm are significantly greater (more than four-fold) in households with an HHD, with men most likely to be defined as this drinker in the household.

Funding

Adult drinking and child maltreatment in families, communities and societies

Australian Research Council

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Epidemiology of Alcohol Problems: Alcohol-Related Disparities

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

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GENDER, ALCOHOL, AND CULTURE: SECONDARY DATA ANALYSES

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

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Alcohol's Harms to Others among US Adults: Individual and Contextual Effects

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

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Alcohol's Harm to Others: Multinational Cultural Contexts and Policy Implications

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

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This study was also supported by the grants from the National Health and Medical Research Council [1090904] and National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism [023870 and R21 AA012941].

History

Publication Date

2020-08-01

Journal

Addiction Research & Theory

Volume

28

Issue

4

Pagination

11p. (p. 354-364)

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

ISSN

1606-6359

Rights Statement

© 2020 The Authors. This is an Accepted Manuscript version of the following article, accepted for publication in Addiction Research & Theory. Laslett, A. M., Stanesby, O., Graham, K., Callinan, S., Karriker-Jaffe, K. J., Wilsnack, S., … Room, R. (2019). Children’s experience of physical harms and exposure to family violence from others’ drinking in nine societies. Addiction Research & Theory, 28(4), 354–364. It is deposited under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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