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Autonomy, special offers and routines: a Q methodological study of industry‐driven marketing influences on young people's drinking behaviour
Author(s) -
Scott Stephanie,
Baker Rachel,
Shucksmith Janet,
Kaner Eileen
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
addiction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.424
H-Index - 193
eISSN - 1360-0443
pISSN - 0965-2140
DOI - 10.1111/add.12663
Subject(s) - varimax rotation , context (archaeology) , autonomy , psychology , marketing , consumption (sociology) , social psychology , qualitative research , advertising , sociology , business , developmental psychology , psychometrics , political science , paleontology , social science , cronbach's alpha , law , biology
Abstract Aim To identify shared patterns of views in young people relating to the influence of industry‐driven alcohol marketing (price, promotion, product and place of purchase/consumption) on their reported drinking behaviour. Design Q methodology harnessed qualitative and quantitative data to generate distinct clusters of opinions as follows: 39 opinion statements were derived from earlier in‐depth qualitative interviews with 31 young people; by‐person factor analysis was carried out on 28 participants' (six previous interviewees and 22 new recruits) rank orderings of these statements (most‐to‐least agreement); interpretation of the factor arrays was aided by 10–15‐minute debriefing interviews held immediately following each Q ‐sort. Setting N ortheast E ngland Participants Young people aged 14–17 years purposively recruited from high schools, higher education colleges, youth centres and youth offending teams. Findings Centroid factor extraction and varimax rotation of factors generated three distinct accounts: factor one (‘autonomous, sophisticated consumers’) illustrated a self‐defined sense of individuality and autonomy in alcohol choices; factor two (‘price‐driven consumers’) appeared price‐led, choosing to drink what was most accessible or cheapest; and factor three (‘context‐focused consumers’) described drinking practices where products were chosen to serve specific functions such as being easy to carry while dancing. Conclusions Considering young people's views on alcohol marketing, different perspectives can be identified. These include perceived imperviousness to maketing, responsiveness to price and affordability and responsiveness to marketing focusing on youth lifestyles.

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