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Journal Article

Citation

Rossow I, Keating P, Felix L, McCambridge J. Addiction 2015; 111(2): 204-217.

Affiliation

Department of Health Sciences, University of York, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/add.13097

PMID

26283063

Abstract

AIMS: To evaluate evidence of capacity for causal inference in studies of associations between parental and offspring alcohol consumption in the general population.

METHODS: A systematic search for, and narrative analysis of, prospective cohort studies of the consequences of drinking, except where assessed prenatally only, or with clinically derived instruments. Primary outcome measures were alcohol use or related problems in offspring, which were collected at least 3 years after exposure measures of parental drinking. The systematic review included 21 studies comprising 26 354 families or parent-child dyads with quantitative effect measures available for each study. Criteria for capacity of causal inference included 1) theory-driven approach and analysis; 2) analytic rigor; and 3) minimisation of sources of bias.

RESULTS: Four of 21 included studies filled several but not all criteria and were assessed to have some capacity for causal inference. These 4 studies found some evidence that parental drinking predicted drinking behaviour in adolescent offspring. The remaining 17 studies had little or no such capacity.

CONCLUSIONS: There is a fairly large and consistent literature demonstrating that more parental drinking is associated with more drinking in offspring. Despite this, existing evidence is insufficient to warrant causal inferences at this stage. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Language: en

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