Detail
Article
Online article
FT
Medvik - BMC
  • Something wrong with this record ?

Contribution of drinking patterns to differences in rates of alcohol related problems between three urban populations

M. Bobak, R. Room, H. Pikhart, R. Kubinova, S. Malyutina, A. Pajak, S. Kurilovitch, R. Topor, Y. Nikitin, M. Marmot,

. 2004 ; 58 (3) : 238-242. [pub] -

Language English Country Great Britain

Document type Comparative Study, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Grant support
G0100222 Medical Research Council - United Kingdom
G19/35 Medical Research Council - United Kingdom
G8802774 Medical Research Council - United Kingdom

E-resources Online Full text

NLK Free Medical Journals from 1979 to 2007
PubMed Central from 1979 to 2007
Europe PubMed Central from 1979 to 2007
ProQuest Central from 1979-06-01 to 6 months ago
Open Access Digital Library from 1947-01-01 to 2005-12-31
Nursing & Allied Health Database (ProQuest) from 1979-06-01 to 6 months ago
Health & Medicine (ProQuest) from 1979-06-01 to 6 months ago
Psychology Database (ProQuest) from 1979-06-01 to 6 months ago
Public Health Database (ProQuest) from 1979-06-01 to 6 months ago

OBJECTIVES: To examine, on empirical data, whether drinking patterns, in addition to overall alcohol consumption, contribute to differences in rates of alcohol related problems between populations. DESIGN: Cross sectional survey. SETTINGS: One Russian, one Polish, and one Czech city. PARTICIPANTS: 1118 men and 1125 women randomly selected from population registers. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Problem drinking; negative social consequences of drinking; alcohol consumption and drinking pattern. RESULTS: Rates of problem drinking and of negative consequences of drinking were much higher in Russian men (35% and 18%, respectively) than in Czechs (19% and 10%) or Poles (14% and 8%). This contrasts with substantially lower mean annual intake of alcohol reported by Russian men (4.6 litres) than by Czech men (8.5 litres), and with low mean drinking frequency in Russia (67 drinking sessions per year, compared with 179 sessions among Czech men). However, Russians consumed the highest dose of alcohol per drinking session (means 71 g in Russians, 46 g in Czechs, and 45 g in Poles), and had the highest prevalence of binge drinking. In women, the levels of alcohol related problems and of drinking were low in all countries. In ecological and individual level analyses, indicators of binge drinking explained a substantial part of differences in rates of problem drinking and negative consequences of drinking between the three countries. CONCLUSIONS: These empirical data confirm high levels of alcohol related problems in Russia despite low volume of drinking. The binge drinking pattern partly explains this paradoxical finding. Overall alcohol consumption does not suffice as an estimate of alcohol related problems at the population level.

References provided by Crossref.org

000      
00000naa a2200000 a 4500
001      
bmc20013870
003      
CZ-PrNML
005      
20200915104350.0
007      
ta
008      
200911s2004 xxk f 000 0|eng||
009      
AR
024    7_
$a 10.1136/jech.2003.011825 $2 doi
035    __
$a (PubMed)14966239
040    __
$a ABA008 $b cze $d ABA008 $e AACR2
041    0_
$a eng
044    __
$a xxk
100    1_
$a Bobak, M $u International Centre for Health and Society, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, London, UK. martinb@public-health.ucl.ac.uk
245    10
$a Contribution of drinking patterns to differences in rates of alcohol related problems between three urban populations / $c M. Bobak, R. Room, H. Pikhart, R. Kubinova, S. Malyutina, A. Pajak, S. Kurilovitch, R. Topor, Y. Nikitin, M. Marmot,
520    9_
$a OBJECTIVES: To examine, on empirical data, whether drinking patterns, in addition to overall alcohol consumption, contribute to differences in rates of alcohol related problems between populations. DESIGN: Cross sectional survey. SETTINGS: One Russian, one Polish, and one Czech city. PARTICIPANTS: 1118 men and 1125 women randomly selected from population registers. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Problem drinking; negative social consequences of drinking; alcohol consumption and drinking pattern. RESULTS: Rates of problem drinking and of negative consequences of drinking were much higher in Russian men (35% and 18%, respectively) than in Czechs (19% and 10%) or Poles (14% and 8%). This contrasts with substantially lower mean annual intake of alcohol reported by Russian men (4.6 litres) than by Czech men (8.5 litres), and with low mean drinking frequency in Russia (67 drinking sessions per year, compared with 179 sessions among Czech men). However, Russians consumed the highest dose of alcohol per drinking session (means 71 g in Russians, 46 g in Czechs, and 45 g in Poles), and had the highest prevalence of binge drinking. In women, the levels of alcohol related problems and of drinking were low in all countries. In ecological and individual level analyses, indicators of binge drinking explained a substantial part of differences in rates of problem drinking and negative consequences of drinking between the three countries. CONCLUSIONS: These empirical data confirm high levels of alcohol related problems in Russia despite low volume of drinking. The binge drinking pattern partly explains this paradoxical finding. Overall alcohol consumption does not suffice as an estimate of alcohol related problems at the population level.
650    _2
$a pití alkoholu $x epidemiologie $x trendy $7 D000428
650    _2
$a poruchy způsobené alkoholem $x epidemiologie $7 D019973
650    _2
$a průřezové studie $7 D003430
650    _2
$a ethanol $x škodlivé účinky $7 D000431
650    _2
$a ženské pohlaví $7 D005260
650    _2
$a lidé $7 D006801
650    _2
$a mužské pohlaví $7 D008297
650    _2
$a lidé středního věku $7 D008875
650    _2
$a odds ratio $7 D016017
650    _2
$a městské obyvatelstvo $x trendy $7 D014505
651    _2
$a Česká republika $x epidemiologie $7 D018153
651    _2
$a Polsko $x epidemiologie $7 D011044
651    _2
$a Rusko $x epidemiologie $7 D012426
655    _2
$a srovnávací studie $7 D003160
655    _2
$a časopisecké články $7 D016428
655    _2
$a práce podpořená grantem $7 D013485
700    1_
$a Room, R
700    1_
$a Pikhart, H
700    1_
$a Kubinova, R
700    1_
$a Malyutina, S
700    1_
$a Pajak, A
700    1_
$a Kurilovitch, S
700    1_
$a Topor, R
700    1_
$a Nikitin, Y
700    1_
$a Marmot, M
773    0_
$w MED00002661 $t Journal of epidemiology and community health $x 0143-005X $g Roč. 58, č. 3 (2004), s. 238-242
856    41
$u https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14966239 $y Pubmed
910    __
$a ABA008 $b sig $c sign $y a $z 0
990    __
$a 20200911 $b ABA008
991    __
$a 20200915104346 $b ABA008
999    __
$a ok $b bmc $g 1563315 $s 1104027
BAS    __
$a 3
BAS    __
$a PreBMC
BMC    __
$a 2004 $b 58 $c 3 $d 238-242 $e - $i 0143-005X $m Journal of epidemiology and community health $n J Epidemiol Community Health $x MED00002661
GRA    __
$a G0100222 $p Medical Research Council $2 United Kingdom
GRA    __
$a G19/35 $p Medical Research Council $2 United Kingdom
GRA    __
$a G8802774 $p Medical Research Council $2 United Kingdom
LZP    __
$a Pubmed-20200911

Find record

Citation metrics

Loading data ...

Archiving options

Loading data ...