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Journal Article

Citation

Single EW, Brewster JM, MacNeil P, Hatcher J, Trainor C. Can. J. Public Health 1995; 86(6): 397-401.

Affiliation

Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse, Toronto, Ontario.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1995, Canadian Public Health Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8932479

Abstract

Rates and correlates of alcohol use are reported from the 1993 General Social Survey, a household telephone survey of 10,385 Canadians carried out by Statistics Canada. Continuing a recent trend, alcohol use has declined. The portrait of the Canadian who is most likely to drink and drink heavily is that of a young adult male who is not married, relatively well-off, and rarely or never attends religious services. In a multivariate analysis of the combined impact of sociodemographic factors on drinking and drinking levels, it was found that the frequency of religious attendance and age were the strongest predictors of current drinking. Gender was the strongest predictor of volume of alcohol consumption, while religious attendance, age, marital status and employment status were also significant predictors.


Language: en

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