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Journal Article

Citation

Ji CY, Hu PJ, Song Y. Alcohol Alcohol. 2012; 47(4): 464-472.

Affiliation

Institute of Child and Adolescent Health, School of Public Health, Peking University Health Science Centre, 38 Xueyuan Road, Beijing, Haidian District 100191, People's Republic of China.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/alcalc/ags037

PMID

22493047

Abstract

AIMS: To understand alcohol-related risk behaviours among Chinese college students. METHODS: As part of the first China National Youth Risk Behaviour Survey, undertaken in 2009, 52,150 students at 119 colleges were randomly sampled. Information was obtained from self-administered questionnaires. RESULTS: Prevalences were: lifetime drinkers 80.8%, current drinkers 49.3% (drank alcohol in past 30 days) and binge drinkers 23.5% ('binge drinkers' reporting at least five alcoholic drinks on a single occasion at least six times during the past 30 days). Multinomial logistic analysis revealed the contribution of sociodemographic factors to three high-risk drinking behaviours: odds ratio (95% confidence interval) = 3.64 (2.69-4.60) with frequent drinking; 3.27 (1.82-4.72) with binge drinking; and 5.48 (3.20-7.77) with heavy binge drinking. These three rates were greater among males than females, in the Western more than the Eastern region, among students living off-campus and among those whose mothers had higher education. Heavy drinking was linked to lower academic self-rating. CONCLUSION: There is a trend towards risky drinking among Chinese college students. Measures such as a minimum drinking age, advertisement restrictions, taxation, drunk-driving penalties and campaigns to heighten public awareness of alcohol-related health risks should be instituted in order to improve the situation on college campuses where alcohol abuse is particularly prevalent.


Language: en

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