Trends in adolescent drinking across 39 high-income countries: exploring the timing and magnitude of decline

Author:

Vashishtha Rakhi1ORCID,Pennay Amy1,Dietze Paul234,Marzan Melvin Barrientos1,Room Robin15,Livingston Michael16

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Alcohol Policy Research, School of Psychology and Public Health, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia

2. Behaviours and Health Risks Program, Burnet Institute, Melbourne, Australia

3. Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia

4. National Drug Research Institute, Curtin University, Melbourne, Australia

5. Department of Public Health Sciences, Centre for Social Research on Alcohol and Drugs, Stockholm, Sweden

6. Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Karolinska Instituet, Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Background Evidence suggests adolescent alcohol consumption has declined since the turn of the millennium in almost all high-income countries. However, differences in the timing and magnitude of the decline have not been explored across countries. Methods We examined trends in adolescent past month or monthly alcohol consumption prevalence from cross-national or national survey reports for 39 countries and four US territories. For each country, we calculated the magnitude of the decline in youth drinking as the relative change in prevalence from the peak year to the most recent year available. Heat maps were utilized to present the timing and magnitudes of these declines. Results The timing and extent of youth drinking declines have varied markedly across countries. The decline began in the USA before 1999, followed by Northern European countries in the early 2000s; Western Europe and Australasia in the mid-2000s. The steepest declines were found for Northern Europe and the UK, and the shallowest declines were observed in Eastern and Southern European countries. Conclusions Previous analyses of the decline in adolescent drinking have emphasized the wide reach of the changes and their near-coincidence in time. Our analysis points to the other side of the picture that there were limits to the wide reach, and that there was considerable variation in timing. These findings suggest that as well as broader explanations that stretch across countries, efforts to explain recent trends in adolescent drinking should also consider factors specific to countries and regions.

Funder

Australian Research Council's Discovery Projects funding scheme

Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award

NHMRC Career Development Fellowship

NHMRC Senior Research Fellowship

Gilead Sciences, an untied educational grant from Indivior

Advisory Board for Mundipharma

Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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