- Perceptions About Alcohol Harm and Alcohol-control Strategies Among People With High Risk of Alcohol Consumption in Alberta, Canada and Queensland, Australia
-
Diana C. Sanchez-Ramirez, Richard C. Franklin, Donald Voaklander
-
J Prev Med Public Health. 2018;51(1):41-50. Published online December 30, 2017
-
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3961/jpmph.17.112
-
-
7,964
View
-
207
Download
-
6
Crossref
-
Abstract
PDF
- Objectives
To explore alcohol perceptions and their association hazardous alcohol use in the populations of Alberta, Canada and Queensland, Australia.
Methods Data from 2500 participants of the 2013 Alberta Survey and the 2013 Queensland Social Survey was analyzed. Regression analyses were used to explore the association between alcohol perceptions and its association with hazardous alcohol use.
Results Greater hazardous alcohol use was found in Queenslanders than Albertans (p<0.001). Overall, people with hazardous alcohol were less likely to believe that alcohol use contributes to health problems (odds ratio [OR], 0.46; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.27 to 0.78; p<0.01) and to a higher risk of injuries (OR, 0.54; 95% CI, 0.33 to 0.90; p<0.05). Albertans with hazardous alcohol use were less likely to believe that alcohol contributes to health problems (OR, 0.48; 95% CI, 0.26 to 0.92; p<0.05) and were also less likely to choose a highly effective strategy as the best way for the government to reduce alcohol problems (OR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.43 to 0.91; p=0.01). Queenslanders with hazardous alcohol use were less likely to believe that alcohol was a major contributor to injury (OR, 0.39; 95% CI, 0.20 to 0.77; p<0.01).
Conclusions Our results suggest that people with hazardous alcohol use tend to underestimate the negative effect of alcohol consumption on health and its contribution to injuries. In addition, Albertans with hazardous alcohol use were less in favor of strategies considered highly effective to reduce alcohol harm, probably because they perceive them as a potential threat to their own alcohol consumption. These findings represent valuable sources of information for local health authorities and policymakers when designing suitable strategies to target alcohol-related problems.
-
Summary
-
Citations
Citations to this article as recorded by
- Prenatal alcohol exposure risk perception dimensions and influencing factors: A systematic review and conceptual model
May N. Erng, Natasha Reid, Karen M. Moritz, Mieke van Driel Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health.2023; 47(3): 100047. CrossRef - Differences in Perceived Threat and Efficacy in Managing Opioid Use Disorder versus Alcohol Use Disorder
Vaishnavi Tata, Zahra Majd, Ashna Talwar, Shweta Bapat, Austin De La Cruz, James E. Essien, J. Douglas Thornton Substance Use & Misuse.2023; 58(10): 1187. CrossRef - Identifying the Assumptions and Bias That Affect Screening and Brief Interventions for Harmful Alcohol Use
Brenda Johnston Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association.2022; 28(1): 76. CrossRef - Rethinking Unhealthy Alcohol Use in the United States: A Structured Review
Joseph R Volpicelli, Percy Menzies Substance Abuse: Research and Treatment.2022;[Epub] CrossRef - Proportion of cancer cases and deaths attributable to alcohol consumption by US state, 2013-2016
Ann Goding Sauer, Stacey A. Fedewa, Priti Bandi, Adair K. Minihan, Michal Stoklosa, Jeffrey Drope, Susan M. Gapstur, Ahmedin Jemal, Farhad Islami Cancer Epidemiology.2021; 71: 101893. CrossRef - Breathalysing and surveying river users in Australia to understand alcohol consumption and attitudes toward drowning risk
Amy E. Peden, Richard C. Franklin, Peter A. Leggat BMC Public Health.2018;[Epub] CrossRef
- Hazardous Alcohol Use in 2 Countries: A Comparison Between Alberta, Canada and Queensland, Australia
-
Diana C. Sanchez-Ramirez, Richard Franklin, Donald Voaklander
-
J Prev Med Public Health. 2017;50(5):311-319. Published online July 14, 2017
-
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3961/jpmph.17.040
-
-
8,198
View
-
136
Download
-
10
Crossref
-
Abstract
PDF
- Objectives
This article aimed to compare alcohol consumption between the populations of Queensland in Australia and Alberta in Canada. Furthermore, the associations between greater alcohol consumption and socio-demographic characteristics were explored in each population. Methods: Data from 2500 participants of the 2013 Alberta Survey and the 2013 Queensland Social Survey were analyzed. Regression analyses were used to explore the associations between alcohol risk and socio-demographic characteristics. Results: A higher rate of hazardous alcohol use was found in Queenslanders than in Albertans. In both Albertans and Queenslanders, hazardous alcohol use was associated with being between 18 and 24 years of age. Higher income, having no religion, living alone, and being born in Canada were also associated with alcohol risk in Albertans; while in Queenslanders, hazardous alcohol use was also associated with common-law marital status. In addition, hazardous alcohol use was lower among respondents with a non-Catholic or Protestant religious affiliation. Conclusions: Younger age was associated with greater hazardous alcohol use in both populations. In addition, different socio-demographic factors were associated with hazardous alcohol use in each of the populations studied. Our results allowed us to identify the socio-demographic profiles associated with hazardous alcohol use in Alberta and Queensland. These profiles constitute valuable sources of information for local health authorities and policymakers when designing suitable preventive strategies targeting hazardous alcohol use. Overall, the present study highlights the importance of analyzing the socio-demographic factors associated with alcohol consumption in population-specific contexts.
-
Summary
-
Citations
Citations to this article as recorded by
- Relationship between attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder and substance use among college students in southeastern Iran
Mansoor Kodori, Sajjad Khosravi, Nadia Oroomiei, Maryam Abdoli, Morteza Ali Moradi, Tahereh Fani, Leili Abedi Gheshlaghi Journal of Substance Use.2023; : 1. CrossRef - Predicting Hazardous Alcohol Drinking Behaviors in Family Members of Hazardous Alcohol-Drinker Patients
Ching-Yen Chen, Chen-Chun Lin, Jung-Ta Kao, Wen-Ling Yeh, Chiao-Yun Lin, Yun-Fang Tsai International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.2022; 19(9): 5497. CrossRef - Alcohol use disorder and its associated factors among residents in Southern Ethiopia during the era of COVID-19
Habtamu Endashaw Hareru, Abdene Weya Kaso, Berhanu Gidisa Debela, Lulu Abebe, Daniel Sisay W/tsadik, Reta Kassa Abebe, Chalachew Kassaw SAGE Open Medicine.2022;[Epub] CrossRef - Factors associated with alcohol use and abuse in Brazilian primary health care settings
Tatiana Longo Borges, Ligiane Paula da Cruz de Sousa, Emilene Reisdorfer, Kelly Graziani Giacchero Vedana, Sandra Cristina Pillon, Adriana Inocenti Miasso Archives of Psychiatric Nursing.2021; 35(5): 486. CrossRef - A scoping review of female drowning: an underexplored issue in five high-income countries
Kym Roberts, Ogilvie Thom, Susan Devine, Peter A. Leggat, Amy E. Peden, Richard C. Franklin BMC Public Health.2021;[Epub] CrossRef - Alcohol use disorder among prisoners in Debre Berhan prison, Ethiopia: a cross-sectional study
Yohannes Gebreegziabhere Haile, Kaleab Berhanu Kebede, Asnake Limenhe, Kassahun Habatmu, Atalay Alem Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy.2020;[Epub] CrossRef - A Bayesian shared components modeling approach to develop small area indicators of social determinants of health with measures of uncertainty
Todd A. Norwood, Clarissa Encisa, Xiaotian Wang, Laura Seliske, Jessie Cunningham, Prithwish De Canadian Journal of Public Health.2020; 111(3): 342. CrossRef - Prevalence of alcohol consumption and related factors among students of higher education centers in one of the northeastern cities of Iran
Behrad Pourmohammadi, Moahammad Ali Jalilvand AIMS Public Health.2019; 6(4): 523. CrossRef - Breathalysing and surveying river users in Australia to understand alcohol consumption and attitudes toward drowning risk
Amy E. Peden, Richard C. Franklin, Peter A. Leggat BMC Public Health.2018;[Epub] CrossRef - Alcohol Consumption and Risky Drinking Patterns among College Students from Selected Countries of the Carpathian Euroregion
Maria Zadarko-Domaradzka, Zbigniew Barabasz, Marek Sobolewski, Edyta NizioĊ-Babiarz, Beata Penar-Zadarko, Agnieszka Szybisty, Emilian Zadarko BioMed Research International.2018; 2018: 1. CrossRef
|