| Literature DB >> 23941363 |
Yang Meng1, John Holmes, Daniel Hill-McManus, Alan Brennan, Petra Sylvia Meier.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: British alcohol consumption and abstinence rates have increased substantially in the last 3 decades. This study aims to disentangle age, period and birth cohort effects to improve our understanding of these trends and suggest groups for targeted interventions to reduce resultant harms.Entities:
Keywords: Abstention; age-period-cohort modelling; alcohol; time-series; trends
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23941363 PMCID: PMC4016750 DOI: 10.1111/add.12330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Addiction ISSN: 0965-2140 Impact factor: 6.526
Figure 1Trends in adult per capita alcohol consumption and proportion of abstainers in the United Kingdom
Estimated effects of demographic variables for men and women on alcohol abstention and drinkers' weekly consumption
| Household income | |||||
| In poverty | |||||
| 60% median to 90th percentile | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | |
| Top 10% | |||||
| Education | |||||
| No qualification | 1.02 (0.02) | ||||
| Below A level | 1.00 (0.02) | ||||
| A level | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | |
| Above A level | 0.98 (0.05) | 0.93 (0.04) | 0.99 (0.02) | ||
| Ethnicity | |||||
| White | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | |
| Asian—Pakistani or Bangladeshi | 0.61 (0.18) | ||||
| Asian—Indian and others | |||||
| Black—Caribbean | |||||
| Black—African and others | |||||
| Others | |||||
| Region | |||||
| England | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | |
| Wales | 1.04 (0.03) | 0.96 (0.03) | |||
| Scotland | |||||
Standard errors are reported in parentheses and statistically significant odds ratios (OR) and incident rate ratios (IRR) at the 5% significance level are indicated in bold type.
Figure 2Mean proportion of abstainers and weekly consumption for drinkers by gender, age group, period and birth cohort. Squares: men; triangles: women
Figure 3Age, period and birth cohort effects as odds ratio (OR) for men and women from logistic models predicting alcohol abstention. Reference groups are the 45–50-year age group, the 2005–09 period and the 1960–64 birth cohort. Dotted lines represent estimated 95% confidence intervals
Figure 4Age, period and birth cohort effects as incident rate ratio (IRR) for men and women from negative binomial models predicting drinkers' average weekly alcohol consumption. Reference groups are the 45–50-year age group, the 2005–09 and the 1960–64 birth cohort. Dotted lines represent estimated 95% confidence intervals