Abstract

Harmful use of alcohol is a worldwide public health concern. Cultural differences may affect responses to questions on alcohol problems, making international comparisons difficult. We aimed to compare self-reported alcohol consumption and problem drinking between Norwegian and Russian populations. We used data from women and men aged 40-69 years participating in the Tromsø Study seventh survey (Tromsø7, N=17646, participation 65%), Tromsø (2015-2016), Norway, and the Know Your Heart study (KYH, N=4099, participation 51%), Arkhangelsk and Novosibirsk (2015-2018), Russia. Alcohol consumption and problem drinking were measured by the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) via questionnaires (Tromsø7) and interviews (KYH). We compared AUDIT scores and components between populations, by sex. Non-drinking was more commonly reported in KYH compared with Tromsø7 (men 15.5% versus 4.9%, women 13.3% versus 7.3%). In men, hazardous consumption (41.4% versus 31.5%) and problem drinking (24.8% versus 19.6%) was higher in KYH compared with Tromsø7, but opposite for women (6.5% versus 12.0%, and 2.3% versus 5.8%). KYH men were less likely to report problem drinking behaviours than Tromsø7 men, with the exception of needing a drink first thing in the morning (13.2% versus 2.4%). KYH women consistently reported less consumption and problem drinking than Tromsø7 women. We found between-study differences in hazardous drinking, but in men these were lower than suggested by differences in country-level statistics on alcohol consumption and alcohol-related health-harms. Study sample selection, stronger social desirability bias effects in the Russian samples, and cultural differences in responding could have affected the results.

Highlights

  • Harmful use of alcohol is a major public health problem worldwide [1]

  • In Russia, harmful use of alcohol, in men, has been a contributor of premature mortality [4,5,6,7]; the observed increase in life expectancy during the last decade is associated with a substantial decline in acute alcohol poisoning [8]

  • Prevalence of problem drinking was higher in Know Your Heart (KYH) men than in Tromsø7 men, both with (27.5% compared with 20.7%) and without (23.2% compared with 19.7%) restriction to current drinkers only, while opposite among women with higher prevalence of problem drinking among Tromsø7 women than KYH women

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Harmful use of alcohol is a major public health problem worldwide [1]. It is designed to measure three domains of alcohol use: alcohol consumption, alcohol dependence and alcohol-related harm, but data from several populations, including Russia [14, 15], supports in reality a two-factor structure: alcohol consumption and alcohol-related problems [16,17,18]. Two recent papers from a study conducted in acute medically ill patients at two hospitals in Oslo, Norway, and Moscow, Russia, found that self-reported alcohol consumption measured by AUDIT correlates well with the alcohol biomarker Phosphatidylethanol (PEth) in blood [19], and was overall more sensitive to revealing harmful alcohol use than the biomarker [20]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call