Meier Petra S, Holmes John, Stevely Abigail, Boyd Jennifer E, Alava Monica Hernández, Hardie Iain, Warde Alan, Sasso Alessandro
MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, School of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Sheffield Addictions Research Group, Sheffield Centre for Health and Related Research, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Drug Alcohol Rev. 2025 Jan;44(1):144-156. doi: 10.1111/dar.13975. Epub 2024 Nov 13.
Investigations of drinking practices often rely on cross-country comparisons of population averages in beverage preferences, drinking volumes and frequencies. Here, we investigate within-culture patterns and variations in where, why and how people drink, answering the research question: how does engagement in drinking practices vary by sex, age and household income?
We conducted a cross-sectional analysis examining the societal distribution (by age, sex, household income) of 12 drinking practices: four off-trade practices (in-home consumption; e.g., evening at home with partner) and eight on-trade practices (licensed-venue consumption, e.g., family meal, big night out). Practices were identified in previous analyses of 2019 British event-level diary data (14,742 drinkers aged 18+ reporting 26,220 off-trade and 8768 on-trade occasions).
The level of engagement in practices varied by sex, age and income. In the on-trade sector, men, particularly those in low-income groups, engaged in traditional pub-drinking, while women, especially older women, engaged in sociable drinking occasions with family and friends which commonly involved food. Young men and women were similarly likely to engage in heavier on-trade practices, which remained commonplace into midlife. Drinking while socialising with friends, both inside and outside the home, was common among younger age groups across all income bands. From midlife, home drinking often involved a partner, especially for higher income groups.
Most drinking practices were shared across the whole population, but level of engagement in them is strongly patterned by age, household income and, particularly in the on-trade sector, sex.
对饮酒行为的研究通常依赖于对不同国家人群在饮料偏好、饮酒量和饮酒频率方面的平均水平进行比较。在此,我们研究文化内部人们饮酒的地点、原因和方式的模式及差异,回答以下研究问题:饮酒行为的参与情况如何因性别、年龄和家庭收入而有所不同?
我们进行了一项横断面分析,研究了12种饮酒行为在社会层面(按年龄、性别、家庭收入)的分布情况:4种非商业场所饮酒行为(在家中饮酒,例如与伴侣在家共度夜晚)和8种商业场所饮酒行为(在有执照的场所饮酒,例如家庭聚餐、狂欢夜)。这些行为是在之前对2019年英国事件层面的日记数据(14742名年龄在18岁及以上的饮酒者报告了26220次非商业场所饮酒场合和8768次商业场所饮酒场合)的分析中确定的。
饮酒行为的参与程度因性别、年龄和收入而异。在商业场所饮酒方面,男性,尤其是低收入群体的男性,有传统的酒吧饮酒行为,而女性,尤其是老年女性,则参与与家人和朋友的社交饮酒场合,这种场合通常会有食物。年轻男性和女性同样有可能参与更频繁的商业场所饮酒行为,这种行为在中年时期仍然很常见。在所有收入阶层的年轻群体中,在家中和家外与朋友社交时饮酒都很普遍。从中年开始,在家饮酒通常会有伴侣陪伴,尤其是高收入群体。
大多数饮酒行为在整个人口中都有,但参与程度在很大程度上因年龄、家庭收入,特别是在商业场所饮酒方面,还因性别而呈现出不同模式。