Journal
PSYCHOLOGY OF ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING FOUNDATION-AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/adb0000860
Keywords
alcohol; product perceptions; drink characteristics
Categories
Funding
- Society for the Study of Addiction Griffith Edwards Academic Fellowship
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This study investigates the characteristics of alcohol products that influence whether they are considered as single drinks or multiple drinks, and identifies the thresholds at which products are considered to contain multiple drinks. The results show that larger packaging sizes, bottled drinks, and higher alcohol content are more likely to be classified as containing multiple drinks. These thresholds are important for promoting more accurate monitoring of alcohol consumption.
Objective: Reductions to the size and strength of alcohol products prompt reductions in alcohol consumption, although these effects may be limited to single drinks rather than packages that contain multiple drinks. This study investigated what product characteristics predict whether a product is seen as a single drink and seeks to identify the thresholds beyond which products are considered to contain multiple drinks. Method: Ninety-four U.K. drinkers from the prolific participant panel categorized 250 alcohol products with varying packaging sizes and strengths into single or multiple drinks. We used multilevel logistic regression to investigate whether packaging size, strength, total alcohol content, and container type predicted the likelihood that products were classified as a single drink across five drink types (beer, cider, ready-to- drink, spirits, wine). We used receiver operating characteristics curve analysis to identify the point at which products become too large or too strong to be considered a single drink by most drinkers. Results: Larger products, bottled drinks, products with higher alcohol by volume (ABV), and higher alcohol content were more likely to be classified as containing multiple drinks. We report thresholds for packaging size, ABV, and total alcohol content where products switch from being seen as a single drink to containing multiple drinks. The thresholds did not significantly differ between low-risk and increased risk drinkers. Conclusions: The reported thresholds can help researchers and policy makers encourage more accurate self-monitoring of alcohol consumption. Future research should test whether single drink classifications moderate the effect of packaging size and strength reductions on alcohol consumption.
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