DEMOGRAPHIC AND METHODOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS ASSOCIATED WITH CHANGES IN FREQUENCY OF ALCOHOL-USE - A METAANALYSIS FROM THE COLLABORATIVE ALCOHOL-RELATED LONGITUDINAL PROJECT
Jm. Golding et al., DEMOGRAPHIC AND METHODOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS ASSOCIATED WITH CHANGES IN FREQUENCY OF ALCOHOL-USE - A METAANALYSIS FROM THE COLLABORATIVE ALCOHOL-RELATED LONGITUDINAL PROJECT, Addiction research, 2(2), 1994, pp. 155-170
Frequency of alcohol use indicates the extent to which drinking is int
egrated into individuals' and groups' day to day social life and has p
otential public health implications. We used data from 25 longitudinal
general population studies, disaggregated by gender and age group, to
estimate the magnitude of changes in frequency of alcohol use over ti
me, if any. Meta-analytic results indicated a reasonably consistent in
crease of about .08 standard deviation across studies. We assessed the
associations of characteristics of individuals (gender, age, birth co
hort, initial abstinence rate, initial frequency), social contexts (co
untry, historical period), and studies (sampling frames, measures of f
requency, attrition rate) with findings of changes in frequency. Frequ
ency of alcohol use appeared to stabilize by the third or fourth decad
e of life, with inconsistent rates of change across studies of younger
persons. The data suggested simultaneous age, period, and cohort effe
cts on changes in drinking frequency. Studies measuring frequency over
longer time frames showed a small, consistent (.06 standard deviation
) increase in frequency over time.