La Trobe

Do gender differences in the relationship between living with children and alcohol consumption vary by societal gender inequality?

journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-12, 07:33 authored by Kathryn Graham, Sharon Bernards, Katherine J Karriker-Jaffe, Sandra KuntscheSandra Kuntsche, Anne-Marie LaslettAnne-Marie Laslett, Gerhard Gmel, Sarah CallinanSarah Callinan, Oliver Stanesby, Samantha Wells

Introduction and Aims: To better understand the relationship between alcohol consumption and living with children, we assessed whether the association varied for men and women across diverse countries and whether this relationship was moderated by country-level gender inequality.

Design and Methods: We used Hierarchical Linear Modelling to analyse data from 32 surveys conducted in 27 countries. Measures included whether the participant was a drinker versus abstainer in past 12 months, annual number of drinks consumed, whether the respondent lived with children, gender (male/female) and age of respondent, and country-level gender inequality measured using the Gender Inequality Index.

Results: Annual drinks consumed was significantly lower for women living with children. Men living with children were generally more likely to be drinkers, and the relationship between annual consumption and living with children was moderated by cultural gender equality: specifically, men in countries with higher gender equality drank less if they lived with children while the association for men in lower equality countries was nonsignificant.

Discussion and Conclusions: Although lower alcohol consumption was found generally for women living with children, this relationship was found only for men in countries where there was more gender equality. Given the high risk of harm to children from heavy consumption by adults with whom they live, prevention efforts need to strengthen prevention of heavy consumption by parents and other who live with children, especially for men who live with children in low gender equality countries.

Funding

Alcohol's Harm to Others: Multinational Cultural Contexts and Policy Implications

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

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Alcohol's Harms to Others among US Adults: Individual and Contextual Effects

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

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The data used in this paper are from the GENAHTO Project (Gender and Alcohol's Harm to Others), supported by National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) Grant No. R01 AA023870 (Alcohol's Harm to Others: Multinational Cultural Contexts and Policy Implications). Support for aspects of the project has come from the World Health Organization (WHO), the European Commission (Concerted Action QLG4-CT-2001-0196), the Pan American Health Organization, the Thai Health Promotion Foundation, the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (Grant No. 1065610), and the US NIAAA/National Institutes of Health (Grants R21 AA012941, R01 AA015775, R01 AA022791, R01 AA023870 and P50 AA005595). SC is funded by a fellowship from the Australian Research Council (DE180100016). See article's Acknowledgements for full details of funding.

History

Publication Date

2020-09-01

Journal

Drug and Alcohol Review

Volume

39

Issue

6

Pagination

13p. (p. 671-683)

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

0959-5236

Rights Statement

© 2020 Australasian Professional Society on Alcohol and other Drugs

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