Alcoholic beverage types consumed by population subgroups in the United States: Implications for alcohol policy to address health disparities.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_046F6915352A
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Alcoholic beverage types consumed by population subgroups in the United States: Implications for alcohol policy to address health disparities.
Journal
Drug and alcohol review
Author(s)
Cook W.K., Kerr W.C., Zhu Y., Bright S., Buckley C., Kilian C., Lasserre A.M., Llamosas-Falcón L., Mulia N., Rehm J., Probst C.
ISSN
1465-3362 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0959-5236
Publication state
In Press
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: aheadofprint
Abstract
We aimed to identify alcoholic beverage types more likely to be consumed by demographic subgroups with greater alcohol-related health risk than others, mainly individuals with low socio-economic status, racial/ethnic minority status and high drinking levels.
Fractional logit modelling was performed using a nationally representative sample of US adult drinkers (analytic N = 37,657) from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions Waves 2 (2004-2005) and 3 (2012-2013). The outcomes were the proportions of pure alcohol consumed as beer, wine, liquor and coolers (defined as wine-/malt-/liquor-based coolers, hard lemonade, hard cider and any prepackaged cocktails of alcohol and mixer).
Adults with lower education and low or medium income were more likely to drink beer, liquor and coolers, while those with a 4-year college/advanced degree and those with high income preferred wine. Excepting Asian adults, racial/ethnic minority adults were more likely to drink beer (Hispanics) and liquor (Blacks), compared with White adults. High- or very-high-level drinkers were more likely to consume liquor and beer and less likely to consume wine (and coolers), compared with low-level drinkers. High-level and very-high-level drinkers, who were less than 10% of all drinkers, consumed over half of the total volume of beer, liquor and coolers consumed by all adults.
Individuals with low socio-economic status, racial/ethnic minority status or high drinking level prefer liquor and beer. As alcohol taxes, sales and marketing practices all are beverage-specific, targeted approaches to reduce consumption of these beverages, particularly among individuals with these profiles, are warranted.
Keywords
alcohol policy, alcoholic beverage type, health disparities, heavy drinking
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
09/02/2024 11:35
Last modification date
17/02/2024 8:12
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