UK student alcohol consumption: A cluster analysis of drinking behaviour typologies

被引:28
|
作者
Craigs, Cheryl L. [1 ]
Bewick, Bridgette M. [1 ]
Gill, Jan [1 ]
O'May, Fiona [1 ]
Radley, Duncan [1 ]
机构
[1] Leeds Inst Hlth Sci, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England
关键词
alcohol; cluster analysis; students; BINGE DRINKING; DRUG-USE; METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES; COLLEGE-STUDENTS; UNIVERSITY;
D O I
10.1177/0017896911406967
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Objective: To assess the extent to which university students are following UK Government advice regarding appropriate consumption of alcohol, and to investigate if students can be placed into distinct clusters based on their drinking behaviour. Design: A descriptive questionnaire study. Setting: One hundred and nineteen undergraduate students from Leeds Metropolitan University, UK. Method: An online survey, which included a diary to record daily alcohol consumption over the previous week, was completed during the winter of 2007/08. Cluster analysis was used to classify students into subgroups based on comparable alcohol-drinking characteristics. National recommended sensible drinking behaviour guidelines in terms of total weekly alcohol intake, maximum daily alcohol intake, number of alcohol-free days and estimated blood alcohol levels were used to compare drinking behaviour the previous week by age, sex and cluster group. Results: Consuming weekly alcohol levels considered hazardous was common (58%) with nearly 70% of responders binge drinking at least once over that period; most students (80%) were, however, following the government's recommendation for two consecutive alcohol-free days per week. No significant differences in drinking behaviour by sex were found, but binge drinkers tended to be younger. Four distinct alcohol-drinking behaviour clusters were identified based on alcohol consumption frequency and quantity. Only students in the non or light drinkers group all remained within national recommended guidelines for weekly intake and alcohol-free days. Conclusion: Students who consume alcohol are commonly drinking daily and weekly alcohol levels in excess of national sensible drinking guidelines; most students, however, abstain from alcohol on at least two consecutive days. The four distinct drinking clusters suggest that students would benefit from targeted interventions. In particular, personalization of interventions to reflect the distinct patterns of drinking behaviour could increase intervention effectiveness.
引用
收藏
页码:516 / 526
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Reported levels of alcohol consumption and binge drinking within the UK undergraduate student population over the last 25 years
    Gill, JS
    ALCOHOL AND ALCOHOLISM, 2002, 37 (02): : 109 - 120
  • [2] Alcohol consumption in the UK armed forces: are we drinking too much?
    Aguirre, Marcela
    Greenberg, N.
    Sharpley, J.
    Simpson, R.
    Wall, C.
    JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS, 2014, 160 (01) : 72 - U7773
  • [3] College Student Employment and Drinking: A Daily Study of Work Stressors, Alcohol Expectancies, and Alcohol Consumption
    Butler, Adam B.
    Dodge, Kama D.
    Faurote, Eric J.
    JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2010, 15 (03) : 291 - 303
  • [4] Ageing and Alcohol: Drinking Typologies among Older Adults
    Roche, Ann M.
    Harrison, Nathan J.
    Chapman, Janine
    Kostadinov, Victoria
    Woodman, Richard J.
    JOURNAL OF AGING AND HEALTH, 2020, 32 (10) : 1486 - 1497
  • [5] Drinking behaviour and alcohol-related harm amongst older adults: Analysis of existing UK datasets
    Wadd S.
    Papadopoulos C.
    BMC Research Notes, 7 (1)
  • [6] Normative beliefs, misperceptions and heavy episodic alcohol consumption in a UK student sample
    McAlaney, J.
    McMahon, J.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2007, 17 : 60 - 60
  • [7] Typologies of alcohol consumption in adolescence: Predictors and adult outcomes
    Cable, Noriko
    Sacker, Amanda
    ALCOHOL AND ALCOHOLISM, 2008, 43 (01): : 81 - 90
  • [8] Student drinking patterns and blood alcohol concentration on commercially organised pub crawls in the UK
    Quigg, Zara
    Hughes, Karen
    Bellis, Mark A.
    ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2013, 38 (12) : 2924 - 2929
  • [9] Typologies of alcohol consumption in adolescence: predictors and adult outcomes
    Cable, N.
    Sacker, A.
    PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH, 2006, 21 : 27 - 28
  • [10] Efficacy of a non-drinking mental simulation intervention for reducing student alcohol consumption
    Conroy, Dominic
    Sparks, Paul
    de Visser, Richard
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2015, 20 (04) : 688 - 707