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Drinking patterns and health outcomes: occasional versus regular drinking
Author(s) -
San José B.,
Van Oers J. A. M.,
Van De Mheen H.,
Garretsen H. F. L.,
MacKenbach J. P.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
addiction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.424
H-Index - 193
eISSN - 1360-0443
pISSN - 0965-2140
DOI - 10.1046/j.1360-0443.2000.9568654.x
Subject(s) - sitting , medicine , environmental health , alcohol consumption , occupational safety and health , injury prevention , suicide prevention , population , poison control , consumption (sociology) , heavy drinking , demography , human factors and ergonomics , alcohol , social science , biochemistry , chemistry , pathology , sociology
Aims. To compare the health of drinkers with different drinking patterns and particularly drinkers with comparable average intakes and different drinking frequency. Setting. General population survey conduced in Eindhoven, the Netherlands (n = 18 973). Measurements. Chronic conditions, perceived general health, and health complaints were the outcome measures. Drinking categories were constructed by taking into account the frequency and amount of alcohol consumption (up to six glasses per sitting). Findings. Drinking 3–5 days per week/3–5 glasses per occasion and drinking 6–7 days/1–2 glasses were associated with lower likelihood for reporting health complaints and for perceiving one’s health as less than good compared to those drinking 1–2 days/1–2 glasses (reference group). Drinking 1–2 days/6 glasses was associated with being more likely to report chronic conditions, compared to the reference group. Those drinking 1–2 days/6 glasses were significantly more likely to report > 3 health complaints than those drinking 6–7 days/1–2 glasses. Although no differences were observed for any of the other comparison groups, at high levels of consumption (18–35 units/week), occasional drinkers (3–5 days/6 glasses) seemed to have better health outcomes compared to their counterparts (6–7 days/3–5 glasses). Conclusion. In addition to average alcohol intake, drinking pattern is also related to health.