Drinking practices: The variation of drinking events across intersections of sex, age and household income.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Drug and alcohol review Pub Date : 2024-11-13 DOI:10.1111/dar.13975
Petra S Meier, John Holmes, Abigail Stevely, Jennifer E Boyd, Monica Hernández Alava, Iain Hardie, Alan Warde, Alessandro Sasso
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Abstract

Introduction: Investigations of drinking practices often rely on cross-country comparisons of population averages in beverage preferences, drinking volumes and frequencies. Here, we investigate within-culture patterns and variations in where, why and how people drink, answering the research question: how does engagement in drinking practices vary by sex, age and household income?

Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional analysis examining the societal distribution (by age, sex, household income) of 12 drinking practices: four off-trade practices (in-home consumption; e.g., evening at home with partner) and eight on-trade practices (licensed-venue consumption, e.g., family meal, big night out). Practices were identified in previous analyses of 2019 British event-level diary data (14,742 drinkers aged 18+ reporting 26,220 off-trade and 8768 on-trade occasions).

Results: The level of engagement in practices varied by sex, age and income. In the on-trade sector, men, particularly those in low-income groups, engaged in traditional pub-drinking, while women, especially older women, engaged in sociable drinking occasions with family and friends which commonly involved food. Young men and women were similarly likely to engage in heavier on-trade practices, which remained commonplace into midlife. Drinking while socialising with friends, both inside and outside the home, was common among younger age groups across all income bands. From midlife, home drinking often involved a partner, especially for higher income groups.

Discussion and conclusions: Most drinking practices were shared across the whole population, but level of engagement in them is strongly patterned by age, household income and, particularly in the on-trade sector, sex.

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饮酒习惯:饮酒事件在性别、年龄和家庭收入交叉点上的变化。
导言:对饮酒习惯的调查通常依赖于对饮酒偏好、饮酒量和频率的人口平均值进行跨国比较。在此,我们调查了文化内部的模式以及人们在何处饮酒、为何饮酒和如何饮酒等方面的差异,以回答研究问题:不同性别、年龄和家庭收入的人在饮酒习惯上有何不同?我们进行了一项横向分析,研究了 12 种饮酒方式的社会分布(按年龄、性别、家庭收入):4 种非贸易饮酒方式(家庭消费,如晚上与伴侣在家)和 8 种贸易饮酒方式(持牌场所消费,如家庭聚餐、大型外出活动)。这些做法是在之前对 2019 年英国活动层面的日记数据(14742 名 18 岁以上的饮酒者报告了 26220 次非贸易场合和 8768 次贸易场合)进行分析后确定的:参与实践的程度因性别、年龄和收入而异。在零售业,男性,尤其是低收入人群,参与传统的酒吧饮酒,而女性,尤其是年长女性,参与与家人和朋友的社交饮酒,通常涉及食物。年轻男性和女性同样有可能从事较重的酒业活动,这种情况到了中年仍很普遍。与朋友在家庭内外社交时饮酒,在所有收入段的年轻群体中都很常见。从中年开始,在家中饮酒往往有伴侣参与,尤其是在收入较高的群体中:讨论和结论:大多数饮酒习惯在整个人口中都是相同的,但饮酒程度却因年龄、家庭收入和性别(尤其是在餐饮业)而有很大不同。
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来源期刊
Drug and alcohol review
Drug and alcohol review SUBSTANCE ABUSE-
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
10.50%
发文量
151
期刊介绍: Drug and Alcohol Review is an international meeting ground for the views, expertise and experience of all those involved in studying alcohol, tobacco and drug problems. Contributors to the Journal examine and report on alcohol and drug use from a wide range of clinical, biomedical, epidemiological, psychological and sociological perspectives. Drug and Alcohol Review particularly encourages the submission of papers which have a harm reduction perspective. However, all philosophies will find a place in the Journal: the principal criterion for publication of papers is their quality.
期刊最新文献
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