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Hazardous alcohol consumption in slow- and fast-privatized Russian industrial towns.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


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Authors

Gugushvili, Alexi 
Azarova, Aytalina 
Irdam, Darja 
King, Lawrence 

Abstract

Hazardous drinking, defined as the consumption of homemade, unofficially made alcohol and non-beverages, is prevalent and accounts for a high proportion of alcohol-related deaths in Russia. Individual-level characteristics are important explanations of hazardous drinking, but they are unlikely to explain spatial variation in this type of alcohol consumption. Areas that attracted insufficient attention in the research of hazardous drinking are the legacy of industrialization and the speed of economic reforms, mainly through the privatization policy of major enterprises in the 1990s. Applying mixed-effects logistic regressions to a unique dataset from 30 industrial towns in the European part of Russia, we find that in addition to individual-level characteristics such as gender, age, marital status, education, social isolation, labor market status, and material deprivation, the types of towns where informants' relatives resided such as industrial structure and speed of privatization also accounted for the variance in hazardous alcohol consumption among both male and female populations of the analyzed towns.

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Keywords

Demographic cohort study, Hazardous drinking, Multilevel analysis, Non-beverage alcohol, Russia, Transition, Humans, Russia, Male, Female, Alcohol Drinking, Adult, Privatization, Middle Aged, Industry, Young Adult

Journal Title

Sci Rep

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2045-2322
2045-2322

Volume Title

14

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sponsorship
European Research Council (269036)