A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Associations of Adolescent Alcohol Use and Self-Reported Alcohol Tolerance With Risk of Self-Harm and Suicide in Early Adulthood: A Birth-Cohort Study




AuthorsLevola Jonna, Denisoff Alexander, Mustonen Antti, Alakokkare Anni-Emilia, Miettunen Jouko, Bramness Jørgen G., Niemelä Solja

PublisherAlcohol Research Documentation

Publication year2023

JournalJournal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs

Journal name in sourceJournal of studies on alcohol and drugs

Volume84

Issue2

First page 198

Last page207

ISSN1938-4114

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.15288/jsad.22-00055


Abstract

Objective:
We aimed to assess the predictive associations of age at first drink (AFD), age at first intoxication (AFI), frequency of intoxication, and self-reported alcohol tolerance at ages 15–16 with self-harm requiring medical attention or suicide death by age 33.

Method:
In an ongoing follow-up study, the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986, a total of 7,735 individuals were included at ages 15–16. Information on alcohol and other substance use was assessed via questionnaires. Information on self-harm or suicide was collected from national registers until the participants were 33 years of age. Baseline psychiatric symptomatology measured with the Youth Self-Report questionnaire and sociodemographic background variables were controlled for in multivariable analyses using Cox regression analyses.

Results:
Male gender and psychiatric symptoms at ages 15–16 were consistently associated with greater risk of self-harm and suicide death. When baseline psychiatric symptomatology and other background variables were adjusted for, younger AFI (hazard ratio [HR] = 2.28, 95% CI [1.16, 4.47]) and high inherent alcohol tolerance (HR = 3.76, 95% CI [1.55, 9.08]) were associated with self-harm. Furthermore, frequent alcohol intoxication (HR = 5.39, 95% CI [1.44, 20.23]) and high inherent alcohol tolerance (HR = 6.20, 95% CI [1.18, 32.45]) were associated with suicide death by age 33.

Conclusions:
High alcohol tolerance, age at onset of intoxication, and frequency of alcohol intoxication in adolescence appear to be significant predictors of self-harm and suicide in early adulthood. Self-reported alcohol tolerance in adolescence is a novel empirical approach to assess adolescent alcohol use associating with subsequent harms.



Last updated on 2025-27-03 at 21:49