COMPONENT 5. METHODOLOGIES FOR IMPROVING MEASUREMENT OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION AND PROBLEMS (All years).
The aims of the proposed component are to: 1) Improve estimates of the mean and sources of variation in drink size and ethanol content for beer, wine and spirits drinks consumed at home through beaker size measurement and brand identification of subjects'usual drinks. 2) Estimate mean values and explore the sources of variation in on-premise beer, wine and spirits-based drinks. Bartender focus groups will explore perceptions of drink size and sources of variation by those who make the drinks. Results will be used to inform the design of intensive direct drink measurement in a small sample of bars and restaurants where a variety of drinks will be purchased on multiple visits. Drink size will be directly measured and the percentage of ethanol in each beverage will be determined by brand for beer, wine and straight spirits and will be measured using an Analox(R) Alcohol Analyzer for mixed spirits drinks. A 10-county random sample of 80 establishments of multiple types will be used to estimate the mean size and analyze key sources of variation in nine representative beer, wine and spirits drinks. 3) Improve estimates of ethanol intake measures from beer, wine, spirits and all beverages combined through the application of empirical drink ethanol content mean and variance estimates to NAS11 based on demographics and drink-specific questions in the survey. 4) Demonstrate the effect of Interactive Voice Response (IVR) technology when used during a telephone interview (in NAS11) on sensitive measures of alcohol use, alcohol-related problems, and risky behavior. 5) Within the NAS11 survey, the relationships between multiple measures of the same construct across time frames and question formats will be quantified and the sources and importance of differences will be analyzed in predictive models. 6) Exploratory analyses will compare alcohol measures in the NAS with those in three major survey series;The National Epidemiologic Survey of Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC), the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) and the National Household Survey of Drug Use and Health (NSDUH). These analyses will consider not only overall and demographic sub-group means and prevalence estimates but also the full distribution of responses. The ARG Center will continue to play a central role in the development, improvement and evaluation of methodologies for measuring diverse aspects of alcohol use and a wide range of alcohol-related problems and related health-risk behaviors. Results will be disseminated to researchers, practitioners and the public.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
5P30AA005595-30
Application #
8015955
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAA1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2010-01-01
Budget End
2010-12-31
Support Year
30
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$183,817
Indirect Cost
Name
Public Health Institute
Department
Type
DUNS #
128663390
City
Oakland
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94607
Stanesby, Oliver; Callinan, Sarah; Graham, Kathryn et al. (2018) Harm from Known Others' Drinking by Relationship Proximity to the Harmful Drinker and Gender: A Meta-Analysis Across 10 Countries. Alcohol Clin Exp Res 42:1693-1703
Karriker-Jaffe, Katherine J; Liu, HuiGuo; Kaplan, Lauren M (2016) Understanding Associations Between Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status and Negative Consequences of Drinking: a Moderated Mediation Analysis. Prev Sci 17:513-24
Gilbert, Paul A; Zemore, Sarah E (2016) Discrimination and drinking: A systematic review of the evidence. Soc Sci Med 161:178-94
Cherpitel, Cheryl J; Ye, Yu; Bond, Jason et al. (2015) Relative risk of injury from acute alcohol consumption: modeling the dose-response relationship in emergency department data from 18 countries. Addiction 110:279-88
Asiimwe, Stephen B; Fatch, Robin; Emenyonu, Nneka I et al. (2015) Comparison of Traditional and Novel Self-Report Measures to an Alcohol Biomarker for Quantifying Alcohol Consumption Among HIV-Infected Adults in Sub-Saharan Africa. Alcohol Clin Exp Res 39:1518-27
Clausen, Thomas; Martinez, Priscilla; Towers, Andy et al. (2015) Alcohol Consumption at Any Level Increases Risk of Injury Caused by Others: Data from the Study on Global AGEing and Adult Health. Subst Abuse 9:125-32
Cherpitel, Cheryl J; Ye, Yu (2014) Differences in risk of injury in the U.S. general population by injury treatment type: data from the 1995 to 2010 national alcohol surveys. Alcohol Clin Exp Res 38:1094-9
Cook, Won Kim; Bond, Jason; Greenfield, Thomas K (2014) Are alcohol policies associated with alcohol consumption in low- and middle-income countries? Addiction 109:1081-90
Gilbert, Scott M; Sanda, Martin G; Dunn, Rodney L et al. (2014) Satisfaction with information used to choose prostate cancer treatment. J Urol 191:1265-71
Jones-Webb, Rhonda; Karriker-Jaffe, Katherine J (2013) Neighborhood disadvantage, high alcohol content beverage consumption, drinking norms, and drinking consequences: a mediation analysis. J Urban Health 90:667-84

Showing the most recent 10 out of 61 publications