TY - JOUR
T1 - Risky alcohol consumption among women in Australia attending breast screening services
T2 - an exploratory cross-sectional study
AU - Grigg, Jasmin
AU - Manning, Victoria
AU - Cheetham, Ali
AU - Greenwood, Christopher J.
AU - Youssef, George
AU - Lockie, Darren
AU - Bell, Robin
AU - Stragalinos, Peta
AU - Bernard, Chloe
AU - Lubman, Dan I.
N1 - Funding Information:
D.L., V.M., R.B. and J.G. have received grants from the National Health and Medical Research Council. D.L. is supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council Leadership Fellowship. R.B. has received a research grant from the Medical Research Future Fund. D.L. has provided consultancy advice to Lundbeck and Indivior, and has received travel support and speaker honoraria from Camurus, Indivior, Janssen and Lundbeck. There are no other competing interests to declare.
Funding Information:
This work was supported by research grants from VicHealth and the Eastern Health Foundation. The funders had no role in any part of this study. We thank BreastScreen Victoria for their support of this project, and we thank the Lifepool Project (Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre) for permitting access to their data. Lifepool is supported by an infrastructure grant from the National Breast Cancer Foundation, Australia. We acknowledge the valuable contribution of all Lifepool participants, and thank Lisa Devereux for her assistance in accessing the Lifepool data set. Data are not shared as there is no participant permission, approval from the Lifepool project or ethics approval to do so. Open access publishing facilitated by Monash University, as part of the Wiley ‐ Monash University agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Addiction published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society for the Study of Addiction.
PY - 2023/8
Y1 - 2023/8
N2 - Background and Aims: Alcohol is a major modifiable risk factor for female breast cancer, with breast cancer risk now associated with substantially lower consumption levels than those previously deemed safe. This study sought to measure risky drinking among women attending breast screening services in Australia according to new national alcohol guidelines and to compare daily, weekly and recent (past 12 months) consumption to Australian gender and age population norms. Design, Setting and Participants: This study was a retrospective analysis of cross-sectional data from the Lifepool Project (collected October 2011–January 2016) in Victoria, Australia, comprising a convenience sample of women attending breast screening services aged 40+ years. Measurements: Typical and heavy alcohol consumption patterns over the previous 12 months (frequency, quantity), socio-demographic (e.g. age, education) and health-related (e.g. menopause status, breast cancer history) characteristics. Primary outcomes were the proportion of women drinking at a level exceeding new guidelines for weekly and daily alcohol consumption. Findings: Of 49 240 women, mean age was 59.94 years (standard deviation = 7.14, range = 40–94 years). Most women had consumed alcohol during the past 12 months [41 628, 85.48%, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 85.16, 85.79]. One in five women (8464, 18.34%, 95% CI = 17.99, 18.69) were drinking at a level exceeding new national guidelines for weekly consumption (i.e. greater than 10 standard drinks per week), and one in six (7446, 15.60%, 95% CI = 15.28, 15.93) were exceeding new guidelines for consumption on a single day (i.e. greater than four standard drinks on any 1 day, more than once per month). The proportion of women in this sample drinking daily (4.21–11.19%), weekly (34.73–50.71%) and in the past 12 months (74.96–90.81%) was significantly greater among nearly all age groups (by decade), compared with Australian gender and age norms [drinking daily (3.4–9.1%), weekly (27.1–37.6%) and in the past 12 months (64.4–81.9%)]. Conclusions: There appears to be a high prevalence of risky alcohol consumption among a large convenience sample of breast screening service clients in Australia using new national alcohol guidelines introduced in December 2020.
AB - Background and Aims: Alcohol is a major modifiable risk factor for female breast cancer, with breast cancer risk now associated with substantially lower consumption levels than those previously deemed safe. This study sought to measure risky drinking among women attending breast screening services in Australia according to new national alcohol guidelines and to compare daily, weekly and recent (past 12 months) consumption to Australian gender and age population norms. Design, Setting and Participants: This study was a retrospective analysis of cross-sectional data from the Lifepool Project (collected October 2011–January 2016) in Victoria, Australia, comprising a convenience sample of women attending breast screening services aged 40+ years. Measurements: Typical and heavy alcohol consumption patterns over the previous 12 months (frequency, quantity), socio-demographic (e.g. age, education) and health-related (e.g. menopause status, breast cancer history) characteristics. Primary outcomes were the proportion of women drinking at a level exceeding new guidelines for weekly and daily alcohol consumption. Findings: Of 49 240 women, mean age was 59.94 years (standard deviation = 7.14, range = 40–94 years). Most women had consumed alcohol during the past 12 months [41 628, 85.48%, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 85.16, 85.79]. One in five women (8464, 18.34%, 95% CI = 17.99, 18.69) were drinking at a level exceeding new national guidelines for weekly consumption (i.e. greater than 10 standard drinks per week), and one in six (7446, 15.60%, 95% CI = 15.28, 15.93) were exceeding new guidelines for consumption on a single day (i.e. greater than four standard drinks on any 1 day, more than once per month). The proportion of women in this sample drinking daily (4.21–11.19%), weekly (34.73–50.71%) and in the past 12 months (74.96–90.81%) was significantly greater among nearly all age groups (by decade), compared with Australian gender and age norms [drinking daily (3.4–9.1%), weekly (27.1–37.6%) and in the past 12 months (64.4–81.9%)]. Conclusions: There appears to be a high prevalence of risky alcohol consumption among a large convenience sample of breast screening service clients in Australia using new national alcohol guidelines introduced in December 2020.
KW - Alcohol
KW - alcohol consumption
KW - alcohol guidelines
KW - breast cancer
KW - breast screening
KW - women
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85152894788&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/add.16191
DO - 10.1111/add.16191
M3 - Article
C2 - 37057463
AN - SCOPUS:85152894788
SN - 0965-2140
VL - 118
SP - 1493
EP - 1506
JO - Addiction
JF - Addiction
IS - 8
ER -