La Trobe

Harms to children from the financial effects of others’ drinking

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posted on 2025-01-08, 23:46 authored by Anne-Marie LaslettAnne-Marie Laslett, Yvette Mojica PerezYvette Mojica Perez, O Waleewong, HTM Hanh, Heng JiangHeng Jiang
Background: Many children live with parents who drink and experience little impact, but risky or heavy drinking by caregivers can result in a range of harms to children. Alcohol-related financial harms which directly impact children's needs in general populations have been seldom studied. Objective: The study aims to identify the prevalence and correlates of financial harms from others’ drinking affecting children's needs in nine lower- and middle-income (LMICs) and high-income countries (HICs). Methods: Participants (n = 7,669) from Brazil, Chile, Ireland, Lao PDR, Nigeria, Sri Lanka, Thailand, USA and Viet Nam were aged 18–64 years and living with children. Logistic regression and meta-analyses explored differences in financial harm affecting children among LMICs and HICs, adjusting for gender, education, rurality and drinking pattern. Results: In around one-tenth to a third of households in the nine countries, children lived with people who drank riskily. Less than 1% to 8% of respondents reported that their children's needs had not been met because of financial harm from others’ drinking. Women reported significantly greater harm to children due to the financial effects of others’ drinking than men in the USA, Nigeria and Viet Nam. When the participant reported drinking riskily, and particularly when families included someone who drank heavily, increased odds of financial harm from others’ drinking affecting children were identified. Conclusion: That children's needs were not met due to financial harm from others’ drinking was reported by three percent (<1 to 8%) of caregivers across the nine countries, representing a problem for large numbers of children, particularly in the low and middle-income countries studied. When a person's drinking was reported to be heavy or harmful within the family, the risk that children's needs were affected by the financial impacts of others’ drinking was significantly greater.

Funding

The data used in this study are from the GENAHTO Project (Gender and Alcohol's Harm to Others), supported by U.S. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism/National Institutes of Health (NIAAA) Grant No. R01 AA023870 (Alcohol's Harm to Others: Multinational Cultural Contexts and Policy Implications). GENAHTO is a collaborative international project affiliated with the Kettil Bruun Society for Social and Epidemiological Research on Alcohol and coordinated by research partners from the Alcohol Research Group/Public Health Institute (USA), University of North Dakota (USA), Aarhus University (Denmark), the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (Canada), the Centre for Alcohol Policy Research at La Trobe University (Australia), and the Addiction Switzerland Research Institute (Switzerland). Support for aspects of the project has come from the World Health Organization (WHO), the Thai Health Promotion Foundation (THPF), the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC Grants 1065610 and 1090904), and the NIAAA (Grants R21 AA012941, R01AA015775, R01 AA022791, R01 AA023870, and P50AA005595). Laslett's work was supported by the Australian Research Council (DE190100329).

History

Publication Date

2021-08-01

Journal

International Journal of Drug Policy

Volume

94

Article Number

103254

Pagination

9p.

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

0955-3959

Rights Statement

© 2021 Elsevier. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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