1. 'The Dop System of Alcohol Distribution is Dead, but It's Legacy Lives On….'
- Author
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Dixie M. Hedrick, Cudore L. Snell, Marlene M. de Vries, Anna-Susan Marais, Charles D. H. Parry, Julie M. Stegall, Soraya Seedat, Julie M. Hasken, and Philip A. May
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,alcohol use and abuse ,Alcohol Drinking ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,lcsh:Medicine ,Mothers ,Alcohol ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fetal alcohol ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,South Africa ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Environmental health ,Epidemiology ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Heavy drinking ,business.industry ,Alcoholic Beverages ,lcsh:R ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,3. Good health ,fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) ,chemistry ,farm workers ,Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders ,Correlation analysis ,Female ,epidemiology ,Rural area ,business ,Alcohol availability ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Objective: Determine the prevalence of Dop, a system of labor payment via alcoholic beverages, in a South African province, and its influence on maternal drinking and fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD). Methods: Data from studies of FASD epidemiology were analyzed. Results: Forty-two percent to 67% of mothers reported drinking. In 1999, 5% of women reported Dop allocations in their lifetime: 14% of mothers of FASD children and 1% of controls. In 2010, 1.1% of mothers reported lifetime Dop: 1.6% of FASD mothers and 0.7% of controls. Commercial alcohol sales have replaced the Dop system. Total FASD rates remained high in rural areas in 2010 and rose in urban settings. Urban rates of total FASD surpassed rural area rates in 2010. Correlation analysis did not reveal a strong or significant, direct relationship between Dop experience and heavy drinking (r = 0.123, p <, 0.001, r2 = 0.015), or the diagnosis of FASD in children (OR = 0.003, p = 0.183). Conclusion: Dop, as a systematic practice, is dead and does not have a direct influence on alcohol availability, heavy maternal drinking, or the probability of an FASD diagnosis. Nevertheless, today&rsquo, s problematic drinking patterns were heavily influenced (shaped) by Dop and have negatively impacted the prevalence and severity of FASD.
- Published
- 2019