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Journal Article

Citation

Lange JE, Voas RB, Johnson MB. Addiction 2002; 97(9): 1195-1203.

Affiliation

Student Health Services, Health Promotion Department, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

12199835

Abstract

AIMS: The research describes the characteristics and motivations of youthful San Diego County residents who patronize the bars and nightclubs in Tijuana, Mexico. DESIGN: Two random-digit-dial surveys of San Diego County residents-one group aged 18-20 years and one aged 21-30 years-was conducted during a 2-year period. Those who reported having visited the bars in Tijuana in the last year were compared with those who had not. SETTING: All respondents were residents of San Diego County, California, USA. PARTICIPANTS: The study comprised 2200 youths between 18 and 30 years of age. MEASUREMENTS: The interview protocol included questions covering demographic characteristics, drinking and drug-use history, experience with Tijuana bars, and ratings of bar features in San Diego and Tijuana. FINDINGS: About half of the 18-20-year-olds and a third of the 21-30-year-olds reported visiting bars in Tijuana at least once in the past 12 months. Race, age, gender, heavy drinking and drug-use history were significantly associated with visits to Tijuana bars. The price of alcohol and the perceived freedom to get drunk in Tijuana bars were considered attractive features leading to cross-border drinking. CONCLUSIONS: The features of the alcohol service in Mexican bars that attract youthful drinkers (low cost and liberal availability of alcohol, lack of formal controls, and presence of heavy drinkers) are similar to those present in other drinking locales that lead to drunkenness. Thus, a better understanding of the characteristics and motivations of the US youths patronizing bars in Tijuana can lead to improved interventions to reduce heavy, risky drinking.


Language: en

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