Article

Availability of alcohol: Location, time and ease of purchase in high- and middle-income countries: Data from the International Alcohol Control study

Details

Citation

Gray-Phillip G, Huckle T, Callinan S, Parry CDH, Chaiyasong S, Cuong PV, MacKintosh AM, Meier P, Kazantseva E, Piazza M, Parker K & Casswell S (2018) Availability of alcohol: Location, time and ease of purchase in high- and middle-income countries: Data from the International Alcohol Control study. Drug and Alcohol Review, 37 (S2), pp. S36-S44. https://doi.org/10.1111/dar.12693

Abstract
Introduction and Aims:  Cross-country studies on alcohol purchasing and access are rare. We examined where and when people access alcohol to understand patterns of availability across a range of middle- and high-income countries.  Design and Methods:  Surveys of drinkers in the International Alcohol Control study in high-income countries (Australia, England, Scotland, New Zealand and St Kitts and Nevis) and middle-income countries (Mongolia, South Africa, Peru, Thailand and Vietnam) were analysed. Measures were: location of purchase from on-premise and take-away outlets, proportion of alcohol consumed on-premise versus take-away outlets, hours of purchase, access among underage drinkers and time to access alcohol.  Results:  On-premise purchasing was prevalent in the high-income countries. However, the vast majority of alcohol consumed in all countries, except St Kitts and Nevis (high-income), was take-away. Percentages of drinkers purchasing from different types of on-premise and take-away outlets varied between countries. Late purchasing was common in Peru and less common in Thailand and Vietnam. Alcohol was easily accessed by drinkers in all countries, including underage drinkers in the middle-income countries.  Discussion and Conclusions:  In nine out of 10 countries the vast majority of alcohol consumed was take-away. Alcohol was readily available and relatively easy for underage drinkers to access, particularly in the middle-income countries. Research is needed to assess the harms associated with take-away consumption including late at night. Attention is needed to address the easy access by underage drinkers in the middle-income countries which has been less of a focus than in high-income countries.

Keywords
alcohol; availability; location, time and ease of purchase; international alcohol control study

Journal
Drug and Alcohol Review: Volume 37, Issue S2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/08/2018
Publication date online26/03/2018
Date accepted by journal10/02/2018
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/26964
PublisherWiley-Blackwell
ISSN0959-5236

People (2)

People

Ms Anne Marie MacKintosh

Ms Anne Marie MacKintosh

Senior Researcher, Institute for Social Marketing

Professor Petra Meier

Professor Petra Meier

Honorary Professor, Institute for Social Marketing