Harmful Drinking Phenotype in a Large Dutch Community Sample

Author:

Hogenelst Koen1ORCID,Snippe Almar2,Martinic Marjana3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Human Performance , The Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO), Soesterberg 3769 DE , The Netherlands

2. Department of Weapon Systems , The Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO), The Hague 2597 AK , The Netherlands

3. MM Science & Policy Advisors , LLC, Washington, DC 20007 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Aims Harmful drinking patterns are shaped by a broad complex interaction of factors, societal and individual, psychological and behavioral. Although previous studies have focused on a few variables at a time, the current study simultaneously examines a large number of variables in order to create a comprehensive view (i.e. phenotype) of harmful drinking, and to rank the main predictors of harmful and non-harmful drinking by order of importance. Methods We surveyed a large sample of Dutch adults about their habitual drinking characteristics and attitudes, perceptions and motives for drinking. We fed 45 variables into a random forest machine learning model to identify predictors for (1) drinking within and in excess of Dutch guideline recommendations and (2) harmful and non-harmful drinking. Results In both models, respondents’ subjective perceptions of ‘responsible drinking’, both per occasion and per week, showed the strongest predictive potential for different drinking phenotypes. The next strongest factors were respondents’ reason for drinking, motives for drinking and age. Other variables, such as drinking location, knowledge about alcohol-related health risks and consumption of different beverage types, were not strong predictors of drinking phenotypes. Conclusions Although the direction of the relationship is unclear from the findings, they suggest that interventions and policy measures aimed at individuals and social norms around drinking may offer promise for reducing harmful drinking. Messaging and promotion of drinking guidelines should be tailored with this in mind.

Funder

Diageo plc. Diageo had no role in study design, data collection, analyses or reporting

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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