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The development of drinking trajectories among Australian young adults

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posted on 2025-05-16, 03:48 authored by Geoffrey Leggat, Michael LivingstonMichael Livingston, Sandra KuntscheSandra Kuntsche, Sarah CallinanSarah Callinan
Objective: The present study compares drinking trajectories for two cohorts of adolescents and young adults, 10 years apart, to assess whether recent declines in adolescent drinking in Australia represent fundamental shifts in typical drinking behavior. Method: Six waves of annually collected, longitudinal responses from two cohorts of adolescents and young adults ages 15–25 in 2001 (n = 1,436, 48.3% male) or 2011 (n = 2,520, 48.1% male) were acquired from the House-hold, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey (HILDA). Latent class growth analysis was used to determine the best fitting drinking trajectories for both cohorts. Results: Four quadratic classes were identi-fied for the earlier cohort, and three linear for the more recent one. Light/ abstaining, moderate/moderate-steady, and heavy drinking classes were observed in both cohorts, whereas an additional moderate-increasing class in the earlier cohort was absent from the recent one. The two lowest trajectories (light/abstaining and moderate/moderate-steady) appeared relatively stable across cohorts, despite an increase in light/abstaining drinkers in the recent cohort, whereas the heaviest drinkers consumed substantially less in the recent cohort than the earlier one. Conclusions: We found reduced consumption across drinking patterns, suggesting that youth drinking declines are not attributable to significant shifts in drinking behaviors; rather, adolescents and young adults are drinking in a similar, albeit significantly lower, fashion. The stability of these tra-jectories, and the continuation of these declines into adulthood, suggest that reductions in alcohol-related harm may be likely for recent cohorts across their life course.

Funding

Geoffrey Leggat was supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship. Michael Livingston was funded by a National Health and Medical Research Council fellowship (1123840). Sarah Callinan was funded by an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Research Award (DE180100016). The Centre for Alcohol Policy Research (CAPR) is partially supported by funding from the Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education (FARE).

History

Publication Date

2021-03-01

Journal

Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs

Volume

82

Issue

2

Pagination

237-245

Publisher

Alcohol Research Documentation, Inc., Center of Alcohol & Substance Use Studies, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey.

ISSN

1937-1888

Rights Statement

© 2021 Alcohol Research Documentation, Inc. This is the Accepted Version.

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