Warde Alan, Sasso Alessandro, Holmes John, Hernández Alava Monica, Stevely Abigail K, Meier Petra S
School of Social Sciences, Sustainable Consumption Institute, AMBS, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Sheffield Alcohol Research Group, School of Health and Related Research, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Nordisk Alkohol Nark. 2023 Jun;40(3):301-318. doi: 10.1177/14550725231157222. Epub 2023 Feb 21.
This paper examines the co-occurrence of drinking alcohol and eating in Great Britain. Applying a practice-theoretical framework, it attends primarily to the nature and characteristics of events - to social situations. It asks whether drinking events involving food are significantly different from those without, whether differences are the same at home as on commercial public premises, and whether differences are the same for men and women. The focus is especially on episodes of drinking with meals at home, an infrequently explored context for a substantial proportion of contemporary alcohol consumption. Employing a secondary analysis of commercial data about the British population in 2016, we examine reports of 47,645 drinking events, on commercial premises and at other locations, to explore how eating food and consumption of alcoholic beverages affect one another. Three types of event are compared - drinking with meals, with snacks, and without any food. Variables describing situations include group size and composition, temporal and spatial parameters, beverages, purposes, and simultaneous activities. Basic sociodemographic characteristics of respondents are also examined, with a special focus on the effects of gender. Behaviours differ between settings. The presence of food at a drinking episode is associated with different patterns of participation, orientations, and quantities and types of beverage consumed. Gender, age, and class differences are apparent. Patterns of alcohol consumption are significantly affected by the accompaniment of food. This is a much-neglected topic that would benefit from further comparative and time series studies to determine the consequences for behaviour and intervention.
本文研究了英国饮酒与进食同时发生的情况。运用实践理论框架,它主要关注事件的性质和特征——即社会情境。它探讨了涉及食物的饮酒事件与不涉及食物的饮酒事件是否存在显著差异,在家中与在商业公共场所的差异是否相同,以及男性和女性之间的差异是否相同。重点尤其放在在家中就餐时饮酒的情况,这是当代酒精消费中很大一部分人很少探索的情境。通过对2016年英国人口商业数据的二次分析,我们研究了47645起饮酒事件的报告,这些事件发生在商业场所和其他地点,以探究进食食物和饮用酒精饮料如何相互影响。比较了三种类型的事件——就餐时饮酒、吃零食时饮酒以及不进食任何食物时饮酒。描述情境的变量包括群体规模和构成、时间和空间参数、饮料、目的以及同时进行的活动。还研究了受访者的基本社会人口特征,特别关注性别的影响。不同场所的行为存在差异。饮酒场合中食物的存在与不同的参与模式、取向以及饮用饮料的数量和类型相关。性别、年龄和阶层差异明显。食物的搭配对酒精消费模式有显著影响。这是一个被严重忽视的话题,进一步的比较研究和时间序列研究将有助于确定其对行为和干预的影响。