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A comparison of different approaches to measure alcohol consumption . 26 April 2006 Ola Ekholm, Karina Christensen, Katrine Strandberg Larsen and Morten Grønbæk National Institute of Public Health. Background. Self-reported alcohol intake
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A comparison of different approaches to measure alcohol consumption 26 April 2006Ola Ekholm, Karina Christensen, Katrine Strandberg Larsen and Morten Grønbæk National Institute of Public Health
Background • Self-reported alcohol intake • Possible to link mortality and morbidity with drinking behaviour on an individual level • The recommended guidelines for alcohol intake are, to a great extent, based on epidemiological studies that have used self-reported information
More specific questions result in higher reported alcohol intake Beverage-specific questions Large time-variation in drinking
Aim of the study • To compare the reported intake obtained by beverage-specific questions and to compare how different reference periods and response formats influence the self-reported alcohol intake.
Danish Health Interview Survey 2003 Inclusion criteria: Danish citizen aged 18 years or more.
Characteristics of the respondents in each sample by sex, age and marital status. Percentage
Question included in all four samples • How many alcoholic drinks did you have during last weekday? (don’t include Friday, it is considered part of the weekend) • No. of drinks • Beer __ • Strong beer __ • Red & white wine __ • Liqueurs __ • Spirits __ • Ready to drink products __
Four different assessment methods for alcohol consumption All questions were beverage-specific (beer; strong beer; red & white wine; liqueurs; spirits; ready to drink products)
The sex- and age-adjusted weekly mean number of alcoholic drinks
The age-adjusted weekly mean number of alcoholic drinks. Men
The age-adjusted weekly mean number of alcoholic drinks. Women
The Danish National Board of Health’s sensible drinking limits • Men: a maximum of 21 drinks per week • Women: a maximum of 14 drinks per week
Results from a multivariate logistic regression analysis showing the association between a high reported weekly alcohol intake and the different assessment methods
Conclusion A question concerning the intake in a typical week does not seem to underestimate the alcohol intake compared to the 7-day recall measure Estimating the intake for a typical week will take the large time-variation in drinking into account The average weekly intake measure was less specific than the other two measures and the lower reported intake was therefore as expected.
Close-ended response categories Never Less than once a month Approximately 1-3 times a month Approximately once a week More than once a week
Conslusion The open-ended response format is not advisable when the reference period is long The analyses showed that the reference period was important for the self-reported intake for the open-ended questions. However, this was not the case for the close-ended questions
Summary A question concerning typical alcohol intake is feasible to use in epidemiological studies It is more appropriate to use close-ended questions compared to open-ended questions when the reference period is long The length of the reference period seems to be ignorable for the self-reported frequency of binge occasions when using close-ended questions