The intersection race/skin color and gender, smoking and excessive alcohol consumption: cross sectional analysis of the Brazilian National Health Survey, 2013

A interseção entre raça/cor e gênero, tabagismo e consumo excessivo de álcool: uma análise transversal da Pesquisa Nacional de Saúde, Brasil, 2013

La confluencia raza/color de piel y género, ser fumador y consumo excesivo de alcohol: análisis transversal de la Encuesta Nacional de Salud Brasileña, 2013

Gisseila Andrea Ferreira Garcia Etna Kaliane Pereira da SIlva Luana Giatti Sandhi Maria Barreto About the authors

Abstract:

This study aims to investigate whether the intersectional identities defined by race/skin color and gender are associated with smoking and excessive consumption of alcohol in a representative sample of Brazilian adults. This is a cross-sectional study with 48,234 participants in the Brazilian National Health Survey (PNS) - 2013. Crude and adjusted odds ratios (OR) and respective 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) were used to estimate the associations of intersectional categories of race/skin color and gender (white woman, brown woman, black woman, white man, brown man, black man) with smoking and excessive consumption of alcohol, based on the combination of weekly “days” and “servings”. The prevalence of smoking varied from 10.6% for white women to 23.1% for black men, while the prevalence of elevated consumption of alcohol ranged from 3.3% to 14%, respectively. In comparison to white women, only white, brown, and black men presented greater chances of smoking, reaching the OR of 2.04 (95%CI: 1.66-2.51) in black men. As to excessive consumption of alcohol, all intersectional categories showed greater chances of consumption than white women, with the greatest magnitude in black men (OR = 4.78; 95%CI: 3.66-6.23). These associations maintained statistical significance after adjustments made for sociodemographic, behavioral, and health characteristics. Results demonstrated differences in smoking habit and excessive consumption of alcohol when the intersectional categories were compared to traditional analyses. These findings reinforce the significance of including intersectionality of race/skin color and gender in epidemiological studies.

Keywords:
Skin Color; Race; Smoking; Alcohol Drinking; Intersecctionality

Resumo:

O estudo teve como objetivo investigar se as interseções de identidades definidas por raça/cor e gênero estão associadas ao tabagismo e ao consumo excessivo de álcool em uma amostra representativa de adultos brasileiros. Este foi um estudo transversal com 48.234 participantes da Pesquisa Nacional de Saúde (PNS) de 2013. Foram usadas odds ratio (OR) brutas e ajustadas com os respectivos intervalos de 95% de confiança (IC95%) para estimar as associações entre interseções de categorias de raça/cor e gênero (mulher branca, mulher parda, mulher preta, homem branco, homem pardo, homem preto) com tabagismo e consumo excessivo de álcool, derivados da combinação de “dias” e “doses” semanais. A prevalência de tabagismo variou de 10,6% em mulheres brancas a 23,1% em homens pretos, enquanto a prevalência de consumo elevado de álcool variou de 3,3% a 14%, respectivamente. Em comparação com mulheres brancas, apenas homens brancos, pardos e pretos apresentaram risco maior de tabagismo, chegando a um OR de 2,04 (IC95%: 1,66-2,51) em homens pretos. Quanto ao consumo excessivo de álcool, todas as categorias mostraram maior risco de consumo em comparação com as mulheres brancas, com a maior magnitude em homens pretos (OR = 4,78; IC95%: 3,66-6,23). As associações mantiveram a significância estatística depois de ajustar para fatores sociodemográficos, comportamentais e de saúde. Os resultados revelam diferenças no hábito de fumar e no consumo excessivo de álcool quando as categorias de interseções foram comparadas a análises tradicionais. Os achados reforçam a importância da inclusão de raça/cor e gênero em estudos epidemiológicos.

Palavras-chave:
Coloração da Pele; Raça; Fumar; Consumo de Bebidas Alcoólicas; Interseccionalidade

Resumen:

El objetivo fue investigar si las identidades interseccionales, definidas por raza/color de piel y género, están asociadas con el consumo de tabaco y excesivo consumo de alcohol en una muestra representativa de adultos brasileños. Se trata de un estudio trasversal con 48.234 participantes en la Encuesta Nacional de Salud Brasileña (PNS) - 2013. Las odds ratio (OR) crudas y ajustadas y los respectivos intervalos de 95% confianza (IC95%) fueron usados para estimar las asociaciones de categorías interseccionales de raza/color de piel y género (mujer blanca, mujer mestiza, mujer negra, hombre blanco, hombre mestizo, hombre negro) con el consumo de tabaco y el excesivo consumo de alcohol, derivado de la combinación semanal de “días” y “cantidades consumidas”. La prevalencia de consumo de tabaco varió de 10.6% en mujeres blancas al 23,1% en hombres negros, mientras que la prevalencia de consumo elevado de alcohol fue de un 3,3% al 14%, respectivamente. En comparación con las mujeres blancas, solo blancos, mestizos, y hombres negros presentaron oportunidades mayores de fumar, alcanzando la OR de 2,04 (95%CI: 1,66-2,51) en hombres negros. Así como que, para el excesivo consumo de alcohol, todas las categorías interseccionales mostraron oportunidades mayores de consumo que las mujeres blancas, con una magnitud más grande en hombres negros (OR = 4,78; 95%CI: 3,66-6,23). Estas asociaciones mantuvieron significancia estadística, tras los ajustes realizados para características sociodemográficas, comportamentales, y características de salud. Los resultados demostraron que el hábito de fumar y el excesivo consumo de alcohol mostraron diferencias cuando se compararon las categorías interseccionales con los análisis tradicionales. Estos resultados refuerzan la importancia de incluir la interseccionalidad de raza/color de piel y género en estudios epidemiológicos.

Palabras-clave:
Coloración de la Piel; Raza; Fumar; Consumo de Bebidas Alcohólicas; Interseccionalidad

Introduccion

The theoretical framework of intersectionality presupposes that multiple social categories (such as race, gender, sexual orientation, class) interact at the micro level of individual experiences to reflect interconnected systems of privileges and oppressions at the socio-structural macro level (such as racism, sexism, and homophobia) 11. Crenshaw K. Demarginalizing the intersection of race and sex: a black feminist critique of antidiscrimination doctrine, feminist theory and antiracist politics. University of Chicago Legal Forum 1989; (1):139-67.,22. Collins PH. Gender, black feminism, and black political economy. Ann Am Acad Pol Soc Sci 2000; 568:41-53.,33. Bowleg L. The problem with the phrase women and minorities: intersectionality - an important theoretical framework for public health. Am J Public Health 2012; 102:1267-73..

Based on this theory, race/skin color and gender are interdependent and mutually constitutive, and crossing these categories defines multiple intersectional social identities exposing inequalities submerged in traditional approaches of these isolated identities 44. Cole ER. Intersectionality and research in psychology. Am Psychol 2009; 64:170.. Despite the vast amount of existing documentation about the relation between high socioeconomic status and better levels of health care, this does not always occur in the intersectional identities constituted by high social level and racially oppressed groups, for example, defining the so-called intersectionality paradox 33. Bowleg L. The problem with the phrase women and minorities: intersectionality - an important theoretical framework for public health. Am J Public Health 2012; 102:1267-73..

Although intersectionality focuses on the multiple categories of social markers that intersect causing disadvantage, it does not predict that all interconnected identities will be similarly harmed, as in the case of the socioeconomic level, which by intersecting with another identity may produce disadvantages or advantages resulting from social mobility 33. Bowleg L. The problem with the phrase women and minorities: intersectionality - an important theoretical framework for public health. Am J Public Health 2012; 102:1267-73.. Moreover, according to Larsson et al. 55. Larsson SC, Wolk A, Bäck M. Alcohol consumption, cigarette smoking and incidence of aortic valve stenosis. J Intern Med 2017; 282:332-9., intersectionality enables a better understanding of inequality in health and the factors that determine it, which extend far beyond understanding isolated social hierarchies. This theory considers that the person may, simultaneously, throughout life and in different spaces, experience and accumulate both privileges and disadvantages, according to the combination of different social hierarchies.

When using the perspective of intersectionality, the purpose is to show that traditional approaches - analyzing these categories separately - are incapable of understanding all the complexity of the experiences of intersectional identities and their results in health 66. Bécares L, Priest N. Understanding the influence of race/ethnicity, gender, and class on inequalities in academic and non-academic outcomes among eighth-grade students: findings from an intersectionality approach. PLoS One 2015; 10:e0141363.,77. Hankivsky O. Women's health, men's health, and gender and health: implications of intersectionality. Soc Sci Med 2012; 74:1712-20.. This approach can also delineate potential and additional routes for improving the population’s health, and thus guide more effective interventions to reduce social and racial disparities in health 44. Cole ER. Intersectionality and research in psychology. Am Psychol 2009; 64:170..

Racial inequalities, caused by the oppression systems, are emphasized throughout life, stemming from a spiral of accumulated socioeconomic disadvantages and stresses, producing racial disparities in health, partly due to risky behaviors that act as health markers, as well as health outcome mediators, that is, avoidable morbidity and mortality all over the world 88. Lim SS, Vos T, Flaxman AD, Danaei G, Shibuya K, Adair-Rohani H, et al. A comparative risk assessment of burden of disease and injury attributable to 67 risk factors and risk factor clusters in 21 regions, 1990-2010: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010. Lancet 2012; 380:2224-60.. Smoking and alcohol consumption occupy a prominent position among the 20 main health risk behaviors 99. GBD 2015 Risk Factors Collaborators. Global, regional, and national comparative risk assessment of 79 behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risks or clusters of risks, 1990-2015: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015. Lancet 2016; 388:1659-724..

The consensus regarding how the intersectional identities influence the risk behaviors and outcomes in health does not exist. However, it is known that intersections of minority or disadvantaged identities converge by complex pathways producing negative health results, deepening the inequities in health, and revealing multiple vulnerabilities 1010. Bauer GR. Incorporating intersectionality theory into population health research methodology: challenges and the potential to advance health equity. Soc Sci Med 2014; 110:10-7.,1111. Williams DR, Kontos EZ, Viswanath K, Haas JS, Lathan CS, MacConaill LE, et al. Integrating multiple social statuses in health disparities research: the case of lung cancer. Health Serv Res 2012; 47(3 Pt 2):1255-77.. For example, studies that investigated the relation between the intersection of race and gender with risk behaviors, showed that participants with multiple disadvantaged identities are more likely to present abusive consumption of alcohol and other psychoactive substances 1212. Demant D, Oviedo-Trespalacios O, Carroll JA, Ferris JA, Maier L, Barratt MJ, et al. Do people with intersecting identities report more high-risk alcohol use and lifetime substance use? Int J Public Health 2018; 63:621-30..

In Brazil, according to the results of a study carried out by Garcia & Freitas 1313. Garcia LP, Freitas LR. Consumo abusivo de álcool no Brasil: resultados da Pesquisa Nacional de Saúde 2013. Epidemiol Serv Saúde 2015; 24:227-37., the prevalence of abusive alcohol consumption was 13.7% in the Brazilian population, greater for men (21.6%) and black individuals (26%). Regarding smoking, the prevalence in the Brazilian population is 15%, also more prevalent in men (19.2%) and black individuals (17.8%) 1414. Malta DC, Oliveira TP, Vieira ML, Almeida L, Szwarcwald CL. Uso e exposição à fumaça do tabaco no Brasil: resultados da Pesquisa Nacional de Saúde 2013. Epidemiol Serv Saúde 2015; 24:239-48.. Nevertheless, we did not identify studies that utilized the intersectional approach to investigate how multiple social dimensions can combine to deepen exposure to risk behaviors in the country. Although intersectionality is a very important tool, it is still generally underutilized.

Thus, this study aimed to investigate if the intersectional identities defined by race/skin color and gender are associated with smoking and excessive alcohol consumption in a representative sample of Brazilian adults. We aimed to test the hypothesis that brown and black women and men, show higher prevalence of smoking and excessive alcohol consumption, as compared to white women, which are not explained by sociodemographic factors.

Methods

Study design

This is a cross-sectional population-based study using data from the Brazilian National Health Survey (PNS), a household-based investigation representative of the Brazilian population, conducted by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) in partnership with the Brazilian Ministry of Health and the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, in 2013. The PNS was approved by the Brazilian National Research Ethics Commission (process: 328,159, of June 26, 2013), and all interviewees signed an informed consent form.

The PNS sampling process was performed by conglomerate in three stages: in the first stage, based on simple random sampling, the primary sampling units (PSU), census sectors, or sets of census sectors in each stratum of the IBGE master sample were selected, with probability proportional to size; households were randomly selected from the PSU and comprised the second stage; and within each household, a resident aged 18 years or over was randomly selected to answer the individual questionnaire, thus completing the third stage.

Among the 81,254 households selected for visits, 69,994 were occupied; out of these 64,348 adults were selected to answer the individual questionnaire but only 60,202 adults agreed to answer, resulting in a 6.4% refusal rate. This study included only data from the individual questionnaire, from participants of white, brown, and black skin, aged 18-59 years (excluding 11,015 participants), since changes in behavior driven by health problems are more frequent among older individuals. Self-reported indigenous or yellow race/skin color individuals were not included in the analysis due to the small sample number of these participants (n = 953), resulting in 48,234 individuals.

Further details on the sampling methods are available in a previous study by Damacena et al. 1515. Damacena GN, Szwarcwald CL, Malta DC, Souza Júnior PR, Vieira ML, Pereira CA, et al. O processo de desenvolvimento da Pesquisa Nacional de Saúde no Brasil, 2013. Epidemiol Serv Saúde 2015; 24:197-206..

Study variables

Outcome variables

(a) Excessive alcohol consumption

Alcohol consumption was measured based on the combination of information on number of “days” and number of “servings” of alcoholic beverage consumed, and was obtained by the following questions: “How many days a week do you usually drink an alcoholic beverage?” and “In general, on the day you drink, how many servings of alcoholic beverage do you consume?”. Excessive alcohol consumption (no, yes) corresponded to a consumption equal to or greater than 15 servings for men and 8 servings for women, according to the “heavy drinker” indicator, recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 1616. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Indicator definitions - alcohol. https://www.cdc.gov/cdi/definitions/alcohol.html (accessed on 17/Sep/2019).
https://www.cdc.gov/cdi/definitions/alco...
. One serving is equivalent to a can of beer, a glass of wine, or a shot of cachaça [sugar cane distillate rum], whisky, or any other distilled alcoholic beverage.

(b) Smoking

Measured by the question “Do you currently smoke any tobacco products?”, the answers were dichotomized into “I do not smoke” and “I do smoke”.

Explanatory variable of interest

(a) Intersectional categories of race/skin color and gender

These categories were prepared based on the combination of the following variables: self-reported race/skin color, obtained by the general characteristics of the residents, utilizing the terms “black”, “brown”, and “white” to classify the skin color or race of the individuals; and gender obtained through the empirical variable sex (male or female), in a binary and biological way. Thus, the variables were combined and the categories ordered as follows: white woman, brown woman, black woman, white man, brown man, and lastly, black man. White woman was considered instead of white man as a reference category, since the prevalence of the two risk behaviors analyzed is known to be lower in the female group.

Covariables

(a) Sociodemographic characteristics

Age, categorized in age groups (18-29, 30-39, 40-49, 50-59 years); level of schooling (complete higher education, complete high school or incomplete higher education, complete elementary school or incomplete high school, incomplete elementary school, no formal education); household per capita income (grouped by quintiles); job status (occupied, unemployed, retired, other - domestic work, informal work, with physical or mental disability, or who did not wish to work) and marital status (married or stable union, separated or divorced, widowed/widower, and single).

Data analysis strategies

Firstly, descriptive analyses of the characteristics of the study population were made, and the prevalence of current excessive alcohol consumption and smoking was estimated, calculated with the respective 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) as per the characteristics of the study population.

Crude odds ratio (OR) - model 0 - was estimated based on univariate logistic regression, to estimate the magnitude of the association between the intersectional categories of race/skin color and gender and the outcomes of interest. Then, multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed to estimate the magnitude of the association between the intersectional categories of race/skin color and gender and the outcomes of interest, with adjustments by potential confounding factors, comprising model 1 (adjustment by age), model 2 (adjustments for sociodemographic characteristics). A 95%CI was adopted for statistical significance, and all the analyses considered the weight and effect of the sample design.

Aiming to clarify the differences of gender within race and vice versa, stratified analyses by gender and race/color of skin were performed. The analysis stratified by gender had as explanatory variable of interest the race/skin color and, the analysis stratified by race/skin color of the skin had as explanatory variable the gender. The gross estimates obtained were adjusted by age (model 1) and other sociodemographic characteristics (model 2) using multiple logistic regression.

All analyses were performed in the Stata software, version 14.0 (https://www.stata.com/).

Results

Data from 48,234 individuals were analyzed, with a mean age of 37.4 years, most of them were females (56.3%), brown race/skin color (51.5%), employed individuals (69.3%), reported being single (51.4%), and 40% had completed high school or incomplete higher education. Prevalence of smoking and excessive alcohol consumption was greater among black men (23.1% and 14%), followed by brown men (20.7% and 10.5%, respectively) (Table 1).

Table 1
Prevalence of smoking and excessive consumption of alcohol according to the characteristics of the study. Brazilian National Health Survey (PNS), 2013 (N = 48,234).

The prevalence of smoking was greater among the participants aged between 50 and 59 years (21.4%), with no formal education (29.5%), with the second lower household per capita income (17%), who were unemployed (17.3%) or retired (18.2%), separated/divorced (21.5%), and widowed/widower (19.8%) (Table 1).

Regarding excessive alcohol consumption, the groups presenting the highest prevalence were those aged between 18 and 29 years (8.1%), with complete elementary school and incomplete high school (8.1%), with the higher per capita income (8.7%), unemployed (8.9%), and single (9.1%) (Table 1).

In the univariate logistic regression, compared to white women, the chances of smoking were greater in all intersectional categories, except in brown women. However, after adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics, the chances of smoking remained higher for white, brown, and black men, and the chances were higher for the latter when compared to white women (OR = 2.04; 95%CI: 1.66-2.51) (Table 2).

Table 2
Crude odds ratio (OR) and adjusted of the association between race/skin color and gender intersection and smoking. Brazilian National Health Survey (PNS), 2013.

We observed that excessive alcohol consumption was higher in all intersectional categories regarding white women. Also, black men presented chances 4.78 times higher, compared to the reference category (white women). All associations remained statistically significant and with minimal reductions in the magnitudes after adjustments for sociodemographic characteristics (Table 3).

Table 3
Crude odds ratio (OR) and adjusted of the association between race/skin color and gender intersection and excessive alcohol consumption. Brazilian National Health Survey (PNS), 2013.

In gender stratified analysis, race differences in the odds of smoking were slightly higher among men than among women, but only in the age-adjusted analysis. Conversely, the chances of excessive alcohol consumption were 51% (95%CI: 1.20-1.89) and 115% (95%CI: 1.57-2.95) greater for brown and black women, respectively, than white ones, both in the age-adjusted and in the fully adjusted models. Among men, brown and black individuals also showed higher odds of excessive alcohol consumption than white men, but the magnitudes of the associations with race (models 1 and 2) were smaller than those observed among women (Table 4).

Table 4
Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) of the association between race, smoking and excessive alcohol consumption, according to gender. Brazilian National Health Survey (PNS), 2013.

In the analysis stratified by race/skin color, gender differences for smoking were somewhat greater among black than among white individuals, in both age-adjusted and fully adjusted models. Regarding excessive alcohol consumption, men had about twice the chances of women across all race/skin color sub-groups, in both age- and fully-adjusted analysis (white male: OR = 2.28; 95%CI: 1.83-2.85; brown male: OR = 1.99; 95%CI: 1.66-2.38; black male: OR = 2.16; 95%CI: 1.50-3.11) (Table 5).

Table 5
Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) of the association between gender, smoking and excessive alcohol consumption, according to race. Brazilian National Health Survey (PNS), 2013.

Discussion

This study, based on a large representative sample of Brazilian adults, examined the association of the intersection of race/skin color and gender with two significant risk behaviors for health: smoking and the excessive consumption of alcohol. Our results indicate that white, brown, and black men, especially the latter, but not brown and black women, presented greater chances of smoking compared to white women. We also found that excessive alcohol consumption was greater in brown and black women, as well as in white, brown, and black men, even after considering sociodemographic differences among the intersectional groups compared. Brown and black men showed the greatest magnitudes of associations, with chances of excessive consumption of alcohol three to four times higher, respectively, than the consumption by white women. These results confirm our hypothesis of a worse risk behavior profile in the intersection of male identity with the brown and black race/skin color.

In this study, we show that despite both our outcomes smoking and excessive alcohol consumption being risk behaviors in health, crossing the social identities led to distinct relations with these behaviors. For example, women of all intersectional categories are less likely to engage in risky behaviors, such as smoking and excessive alcohol consumption in comparison with men. Therefore, being a woman has been shown to be a protective factor. We emphasize the consideration by Jackson et al. 1717. Jackson JW, Williams DR, VanderWeele TJ. Disparities at the intersection of marginalized groups. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 2016; 51:1349-59. that even in the absence of an association with an intersectional component, such as smoking for brown and black women, these intersectional groups remain more vulnerable due to other factors not considered in this analysis, such as the perception of a lower position in the social hierarchy or racial discrimination, regardless of objective socioeconomic conditions. In other words, the absence of intersectional disparity in a health indicator only suggests that the sum of disparities is not greater than the sum of the two reference identities 1111. Williams DR, Kontos EZ, Viswanath K, Haas JS, Lathan CS, MacConaill LE, et al. Integrating multiple social statuses in health disparities research: the case of lung cancer. Health Serv Res 2012; 47(3 Pt 2):1255-77..

Most traditional studies show that men and black people generally drink more alcohol. However, the results of the gender stratified analysis indicate that race/skin color inequities in excessive alcohol consumption, but not in smoking, seems greater among women than among men. Furthermore, in the stratified analysis by race, we found that smoking discrepancy seems greater among black men and women, as compared to white men and women, while gender dissimilarities in excessive alcohol intake are about the same across all race/skin color groups.

As Williams 1818. Williams DR. Preface: minority men's health. Ethn Dis 2015; 25:237-9. reported, despite women being the minority in gender, they showed better health indicators when compared to men. Therefore, based on this assumption, for black men, the health indicators are even worse. According to the author, the causes of differences in gender and health are related to many social factors that affect the reduction in access to resources and status within the society, creating and enhancing inequity in health.

Several studies 1919. Fernández Rodríguez MA, Dema Moreno S, Fontanil Gómez Y. The influence of gender roles in alcohol consumption: a qualitative study of adolescents and young adults in Asturias. Adicciones 2019; 31:260-73.,2020. Langenau J, Boeing H, Bergmann MM, Nöthlings U, Oluwagbemigun K. The association between alcohol consumption and serum metabolites and the modifying effect of smoking. Nutrients 2019; 11:2331.,2121. Tabernero C, Gutiérrez-Domingo T, Luque B, García-Vázquez O, Cuadrado E. Protective behavioral strategies and alcohol consumption: the moderating role of drinking-group gender composition. Int J Environ Res Public Health 2019; 16:900. demonstrate great variability in social patterns of alcohol consumption between men and women, which are generally attributed to biological, psychosocial and family history factors 2222. Erol A, Karpyak VM. Sex and gender-related differences in alcohol use and its consequences: Contemporary knowledge and future research considerations. Drug Alcohol Depend 2015; 156:1-13.. Overall, men present higher rates of abusive alcohol consumption than women, driven by social constructs such as masculinity 2323. Fachini A, Furtado EF. Gender differences in alcohol expectancies. Arch Clin Psychiatry 2012; 39:68-73., and the social roles that “regulate” men and women behaviors, with women often playing “guardians or moderators of alcohol consumption” 2424. Holmila M, Raitasalo K. Gender differences in drinking: why do they still exist? Addiction 2005; 100:1763-9..

Historically, alcohol consumption by women is regarded as a problem that affects not only themselves, but also their children and their homes, sustaining a social stigma that perpetuates the differences in alcohol drinking patterns between men and women 2323. Fachini A, Furtado EF. Gender differences in alcohol expectancies. Arch Clin Psychiatry 2012; 39:68-73.,2525. Oliveira GC, Dell'Agnolo CM, Ballani TSL, Carvalho MDB, Pelloso SM. Consumo abusivo de álcool em mulheres. Rev Gaúcha Enferm 2012; 33:60-8.. However, gender differences in drinking patterns have attenuated in recent years, mostly due to women’s insertion in the workplace and financial independence, added to the stress caused by women’s double/triple journey 2626. Scheffer M, Almeida RM. Consumo de álcool e diferenças entre homens e mulheres: comportamento impulsivo, aspectos cognitivos e neuroquímicos. Neuropsicologia Latinoamericana 2010; 2:1-11.. In this context, black women are subject to greater disadvantages and subordinations due to patriarchal racism, difficulties in the educational and work spheres, and heavier loads of violence throughout their lives 2727. Silva TS, Christino JM, Moura LR, Morais VH. Gender and alcohol consumption among young people: evaluation and validation of the conformity to Masculine Norms Inventory. Ciênc Saúde Colet 2019; 24:3495-506.,2828. Werneck J. Intersecções de raça, etnia, gênero e classe: faces cotidianas e teóricas. In: Assis G, Minelli LS, Funk SB, organizadores. Entrelugares e mobilidades: desafios feministas. Tubarão: Copiart; 2014. p. 319-28.. Thus, the intersection of gender and race disadvantages increases the probability of black women presenting greater excessive consumption of alcohol and other psychoactive substances 2929. Cardoso LGV, Melo APS, Cesar CC. Prevalência do consumo moderado e excessivo de álcool e fatores associados entre residentes de Comunidades Quilombolas de Vitória da Conquista, Bahia, Brasil. Ciênc Saúde Colet 2015; 20:809-20..

Regarding the excessive consumption of alcohol, our results suggest the magnitude of the association with intersectional categories increases as such identity categories become more socially vulnerable, particularly black women and brown and black men. We emphasize that these results were adjusted by variables (schooling level, income, occupation, and marital status), which are potential mediators of the gender/race-skin color relation and excessive alcohol consumption, since identity shapes occupational opportunities and relations throughout life.

Our findings corroborate the study conducted by Demant et al. 1212. Demant D, Oviedo-Trespalacios O, Carroll JA, Ferris JA, Maier L, Barratt MJ, et al. Do people with intersecting identities report more high-risk alcohol use and lifetime substance use? Int J Public Health 2018; 63:621-30., which showed high-risk and harmful consumption of alcohol, as well as other psychoactive substances, is determined by the crossing of protective and non-protective identities. Williams et al. 3030. Williams DR, Priest N, Anderson NB. Understanding associations among race, socioeconomic status, and health: patterns and prospects. Health Psychol 2016; 35:407-11., stressed the role of psychosocial stressors in promoting risk behavior by racial minorities. For the authors 3030. Williams DR, Priest N, Anderson NB. Understanding associations among race, socioeconomic status, and health: patterns and prospects. Health Psychol 2016; 35:407-11., the toxic residential and occupational environments provided by institutional discrimination expose racial minorities to “conflicts and disruptions such as crime, violence, material deprivation, loss of loved ones, recurrent financial strain, relationship conflicts, unemployment and underemployment3030. Williams DR, Priest N, Anderson NB. Understanding associations among race, socioeconomic status, and health: patterns and prospects. Health Psychol 2016; 35:407-11. (p. 4).

For Cole 44. Cole ER. Intersectionality and research in psychology. Am Psychol 2009; 64:170., the combination of multiple social identities experienced at the same time affects patterns of risk and resources, with privileges and disadvantages that influence access to health services and care in different contexts. Therefore, when using the intersectional approach, the significance of the categories of unequal intersection is stressed, as well as the need to investigate how the various dimensions of social status interact to provide or to reduce exposure to risk factors and health care resources.

As previously highlighted, different theories have sought to explain the associations between intersections of social identities and risk behaviors. For example, Glass et al. 3131. Glass JE, Rathouz PJ, Gattis M, Joo YS, Nelson JC, Williams EC. Intersections of poverty, race/ethnicity, and sex: alcohol consumption and adverse outcomes in the United States. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 2017; 52:515-24. showed in their study that the relation between alcohol consumption and poverty is modified by the race/skin color and gender intersection, showing greater persistence of drinking among blacks, both men and women, with income close to the poverty line as compared to whites.

Farmer & Ferraro 3232. Farmer MM, Ferraro KF. Are racial disparities in health conditional on socioeconomic status? Soc Sci Med 2005; 60:191-204. analyzed the relation between race/gender intersection and socioeconomic level, and indicated the socioeconomic level can reduce or increase the frequency of risk behaviors leading to different morbidities, depending on intersectional identities of race and gender.

According to Haeny et al. 3333. Haeny AM, Sartor CE, Arshanapally S, Ahuja M, Werner KB, Bucholz KK. The association between racial and socioeconomic discrimination and two stages of alcohol use in blacks. Drug Alcohol Depend 2019; 199:129-35., the adoption of a risk behavior, such as excessive alcohol consumption can also be explained by psychosocial factors, such as racial discrimination and structural racism. Higher alcohol consumption can be partially attributed to strategies to alleviate stress due to racial discrimination 3434. Salihu HM, Salinas-Miranda AA, King LM, Dongarwar D, Yusuf KK, Ibrahimi S, et al. Racism, psycho-social stress, and health-related quality of life. Int J MCH AIDS 2020; 9:73-6.. A study in New Zealand indicates that the experience of discrimination seems to explain, in part, the excessive consumption of alcohol among the Maori population 3535. Winter T, Riordan BC, Surace A, Scarf D. Association between experience of racial discrimination and hazardous alcohol use among Maori in Aotearoa New Zealand. Addiction 2019; 114:2241-6.. A review suggests, that, there is no doubt about the existence of an association between the experience of discrimination (race, gender, socioeconomic, etc.) and the daily consumption of alcohol, although the authors draw attention that studying the specificities involving such associations 3636. Gilbert PA, Zemore SE. Discrimination and drinking: a systematic review of the evidence. Soc Sci Med 2016; 161:178-94. is essential. Mereish & Bradford 3737. Mereish EH, Bradford JB. Intersecting identities and substance use problems: sexual orientation, gender, race, and lifetime substance use problems. J Stud Alcohol Drugs 2014; 75:179-88. conducted a study on the health disparities in gender, sexual, and racial minorities regarding the use of psychoactive substances, and found that such disparities are more evident and complex when analyzed based on the intersectional categories.

Nevertheless, as we are faced with heterogeneity in the instruments used and in the methodological path followed in the different studies, their comparability is impaired. Bowleg 33. Bowleg L. The problem with the phrase women and minorities: intersectionality - an important theoretical framework for public health. Am J Public Health 2012; 102:1267-73. suggested that this methodological gap of intersectionality studies in public health is a major challenge, since no consensus on methodological approaches to conduct this type of study is found, scoring as challenges: few studies use intersectionality as a methodological approach; complex formulation of intersectional categories to be analyzed; and traditional statistical methods (linear, correlation, etc.) that do not yet consider the proposal of intersectionality principles.

Studies using intersectionality as a theoretical methodological approach have increasingly occurred in countries such as the United States and Canada 3838. Veenstra G. Race, gender, class, and sexual orientation: intersecting axes of inequality and self-rated health in Canada. Int J Equity Health 2011; 10:3.,3939. Hinze SW, Lin J, Andersson TE. Can we capture the intersections? Older black women, education, and health. Womens Health Issues 2012; 22:e91-8.,4040. Kulesza M, Matsuda M, Ramirez JJ, Werntz AJ, Teachman BA, Lindgren KP. Towards greater understanding of addiction stigma: Intersectionality with race/ethnicity and gender. Drug Alcohol Depend 2016; 169:85-91.,4141. Assari S. Social determinants of depression: the intersections of race, gender, and socioeconomic status. Brain Sci 2016; 7:156.,4242. Wemrell M, Mulinari S, Merlo J. Intersectionality and risk for ischemic heart disease in Sweden: categorical and anti-categorical approaches. Soc Sci Med 2017; 177:213-22.,4343. Parent MC, Hammer JH, Bradstreet TC, Schwartz EN, Jobe T. Men's mental health help-seeking behaviors: an intersectional analysis. Am J Mens Health 2018; 12:64-73.. However, in Brazil, studies investigating the association of intersectional categories with risk behaviors and health outcomes are still scarce, despite the large and persistent differences in gender and race/skin color registered in the country.

Study limitations

Although our objective includes the intercategorical analytical intersectional approach and its association with two significant risk behaviors, we made adjustments by variables that can act as mediators to explain the observed disparities, thus reducing the magnitudes of the final associations considered. Consequently, the results of the crude or non-adjusted analyses can be considered a more accurate picture of the disparities in these risk behaviors related to the intersectional categories of gender and race/skin color.

An important limitation found in the study is the construction of the binary gender category from the man/woman information, which is how the information is collected. Therefore, our results cannot be generalized to a population with other gender identities. Survival bias may have underestimated the magnitude of observed associations, since brown and black men have a higher risk of dying early 4444. Henning-Smith C, Hernandez AM, Ramirez M, Hardeman R, Kozhimannil K. Dying too soon: county-level disparities in premature death by rurality, race, and ethnicity. In: 2019 Annual Research Meeting. http://web.pdx.edu/~nwallace/AHP/Henning2019.pdf (accessed on 17/Sep/2019).
http://web.pdx.edu/~nwallace/AHP/Henning...
and the behaviors studied are associated with a higher risk of chronic diseases, accidents 4545. World Health Organization. The prevention and elimination of disrespect and abuse during facility-based childbirth: WHO statement. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2014.,4646. Peltzer K, Pengpid S. Tobacco and alcohol use among chronic disease patients in Cambodia, Myanmar and Vietnam. Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health 2016; 47:536-45., and violence 4747. Friedman K, Raymond J, Minnig MC, Sakita F, Vissoci JR, Staton C. Association between alcohol use and violence-related injury in emergency department patients in Moshi, Tanzania: analysis of a prospective trauma registry. Lancet Global Health 2020; 47:536-45.,4848. Pérez-Fuentes MC, Molero Jurado MM, Barragán Martín AB, Gázquez Linares JJ. Profiles of violence and alcohol and tobacco use in relation to impulsivity: sustainable consumption in adolescents. Sustainability 2019; 11:651..

Conclusion

Our results demonstrate the significance of adapting the theory of intersectionality to epidemiological studies, which aim to show the relation between smoking and excessive alcohol consumption and social identity groups built from gender and race/skin color.

Based on the intersection of gender and race, our results show that disparities in smoking and especially in excessive alcohol consumption are more complex than the comparison between genders or just between races. Although we have not found gender differences between races, in the excessive consumption of alcohol, the analysis stratified by gender showed greater racial inequality in the consumption of alcohol among women than in men, i.e., the difference between black and white women in the consumption of alcohol seems greater than between white and black men. Regarding smoking, gender inequalities appear slightly greater in blacks and browns than in white individuals, but we found no indication of racial differences in men or women. Understanding these differences helps improving and better directing social health promotion interventions.

Reducing racial and gender inequities and disparities in health is a public health priority, and crossing multiple social identities allows us to broaden the understanding of race/skin color and gender inequities in health beyond what is shown by the traditional forms of analysis of these categories separately.

Acknowledgments

To the Brazilian Graduate Studies Coordinating Board (CAPES) and Brazilian National Research Council (CNPq) for the financial support.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    01 Dec 2021
  • Date of issue
    2021

History

  • Received
    31 July 2020
  • Reviewed
    03 Feb 2021
  • Accepted
    26 Feb 2021
Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública Sergio Arouca, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: cadernos@ensp.fiocruz.br