
@article{ref1,
title="Binge drinking among Maori secondary school students in New Zealand: associations with source, exposure and perceptions of alcohol use",
journal="New Zealand medical journal",
year="2013",
author="Clark, Terryann Coralie and Robinson, Elizabeth and Crengle, Sue and Sheridan, Janie and Jackson, Nicki and Ameratunga, Shanthi N.",
volume="126",
number="1370",
pages="55-69",
abstract="AIM: Describe factors associated with binge drinking among Maori secondary school students. METHOD: Analysis of Maori sample (n=1702) from the 2007 national youth health survey. RESULTS: Among current drinkers, 31.5% reported binge drinking (5-9 drinks) and 30.4% reported heavy binge drinking (greater than and equal to 10 drinks) in a 4-hour session in the past four weeks. Compared with non-binge drinkers, binge drinkers more frequently reported 'drinking alcohol was okay for people their age' (ORbinge =1.9; ORheavy binge =2.4), p<0.0001), had friends that drank alcohol (ORbinge =2.4; ORheavy binge =4.0, p<0.0001), had sourced alcohol from friends (ORbinge =1.7; ORheavy binge =1.2, p=0.002) or from 'other adults' (ORbinge =1.6; ORheavy binge =1.7 ; p=0.0004) and buy their own alcohol (ORbinge =1.7; ORheavy binge =2.8, p<0.0001). Binge drinking was associated with poorer school performance, unsafe sex, unwanted sex, an injury, injuring someone else, motor vehicle crashes and 'doing things that could cause trouble'. Binge and heavy binge drinkers reported greater difficulty accessing drug and alcohol services (OR binge =2.30; ORheavy binge =4.97 p<0.0001). CONCLUSION: Binge drinking is associated with a range of poor health and social outcomes for Maori youth. The associated poorer access to drug and alcohol services reveals an inequity requiring priority attention.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0028-8446",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}