This study found that under 3.2 % of respondents in most high-income countries reported financial harm due to others’ alcohol use, whereas 12–22 % did in Thailand, Sri Lanka and India. Financial harm from others’ alcohol use was significantly more common among women than men in nine countries. Among men and women, financial harm was significantly more prevalent in low- and middle- than in high-income countries.

Author

Anne-MarieLaslett (email: a.laslett@latrobe.edu.au), Heng Jiang, Sandra Kuntsche, Oliver Stanesby, Sharon Wilsnack, Erica Sundin, Orratai Waleewong, Thomas K. Greenfield, Kathryn Graham, Kim Bloomfield

Citation

Laslett, A., Jiang, H., Kuntsche, S., Stanesby, O., Wilsnack, S., Sundin, E., Waleewong, O., Greenfield, T., Graham, K. and Bloomfield, K., 2020. Cross-sectional surveys of financial harm associated with others’ drinking in 15 countries: Unequal effects on women?. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 211, p.107949.


Source
Drug and Alcohol Dependence
Release date
01/06/2020

Cross-Sectional Surveys of Financial Harm Associated With Others’ Drinking In 15 Countries: Unequal Effects on Women?

Abstract

Introduction and aims

That physical, emotional and social problems occur not only to those who use alcohol, but also to others they connect with, is increasingly acknowledged. Financial harms from others’ alcohol use have been seldom studied at the population level, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Whether financial harm and costs from others’ alcohol use inequitably affect women is little known. The study’s aim is to compare estimates and correlates of alcohol’s financial harm to others than the alcohol user in 15 countries.

Methods and materials

Cross-sectional surveys of Alcohol’s Harm To Others (AHTO) were conducted in Australia, Brazil, Chile, Denmark, India, Ireland, Lao PDR, New Zealand, Nigeria, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, the US and Vietnam. Participants: 17,670 men and 20,947 women. Measurement: The prevalence of financial harm in the last year was assessed as financial trouble and/or less money available for household expenses because of someone else’s alcohol use. Analysis: Meta-analysis and country-level logistic regression of financial harm (vs. none), adjusted for gender, age, education, rurality and participant alcohol use.

Results

Under 3.2 % of respondents in most high-income countries reported financial harm due to others’ alcohol use, whereas 12–22 % did in Thailand, Sri Lanka and India. Financial harm from others’ alcohol use was significantly more common among women than men in nine countries. Among men and women, financial harm was significantly more prevalent in low- and middle- than in high-income countries.

Conclusions

Reports of financial harm from others’ alcohol use are more common among women than among men, and in low- and middle-income than in high-income countries.


Source Website: Science Direct