Affiliation:
1. University College London Department of Behavioural Science and Health, , London WC1E 6BT , UK
2. SPECTRUM Consortium , UK
3. University of Sheffield School of Health and Related Research, , Sheffield S1 4DE , UK
Abstract
Abstract
Aim
To examine trends in public awareness and knowledge of drinking guidelines in the UK since their revision in 2016, which had moved from a daily to a weekly guideline, made the guideline the same for men and women, and reduced the guideline for men by around one-third.
Method
Data were from a representative, repeat cross-sectional survey. We analysed changes in awareness and knowledge of drinking guidelines among 8168 adult drinkers between 2016 and 2022 and associations with sociodemographic characteristics, smoking status and level of alcohol consumption.
Results
The proportion of drinkers aware of guidelines declined from 86.0% (95%CI 84.0–88.0%) in 2016 to 81.7% (79.5–84.0%) in 2019, then increased during the COVID-19 pandemic, peaking at 91.6% (90.1–93.1%) in 2020. The proportion who correctly identified the guideline as a maximum of exactly 14 units/week remained at around a quarter from 2016 (25.0%, 22.4–27.5%) to 2018 (25.8%, 23.2–28.3%), whereas the proportion who gave a figure of 14 units or fewer rose from 52.1 (49.2–55.0%) to 57.4% (54.6–60.3%). However, by 2022, guideline knowledge had worsened significantly, with these figures falling to 19.7 (17.4–21.9%) and 46.5% (43.6–49.4%), respectively. Changes over time were similar across subgroups. Odds of guideline awareness and knowledge were higher among drinkers who were aged ≥35, female, more educated and from more advantaged social grades.
Conclusions
The majority of adult drinkers in the UK are aware of low-risk drinking guidelines. However, 6 years since their announcement, knowledge of the revised drinking guidelines remains poor. Less than a quarter know the recommended weekly limit and only around half think it is 14 units or less. Inequalities have persisted over time, such that disadvantaged groups remain less likely to know the guidelines.
Funder
National Institute for Health Research
Cancer Research UK
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Reference33 articles.
1. Changes in alcohol use during COVID-19 and associations with contextual and individual difference variables: a systematic review and meta-analysis;Acuff;Psychol Addict Behav,2022
2. Drinking in the dark: how alcohol labelling fails consumers;Alcohol Health Alliance UK,2020
3. Contents unknown: how alcohol labelling still fails consumers;Alcohol Health Alliance UK,2022
4. The effectiveness of alcohol warning lables: a review and extension;Andrews;Am Behav Sci,1995
5. AUDIT: the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test: guidelines for use in primary health care;Babor,2001