Estimate of adolescent alcohol use in China: a meta-analysis

Abstract Objective A profile of adolescent alcohol use for China that specified gender, school type and a consistent definition of alcohol use. Method A total of 1,646 papers were identified in the Chinese- and English-language literature published 2007–2015 that reported Chinese adolescent drinking...

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Main Authors: Yonghua Feng, Ian M. Newman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2016-10-01
Series:Archives of Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13690-016-0157-5
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spelling doaj-aafa1e27283447a487046a34c16332492020-11-25T00:51:36ZengBMCArchives of Public Health2049-32582016-10-0174111410.1186/s13690-016-0157-5Estimate of adolescent alcohol use in China: a meta-analysisYonghua Feng0Ian M. Newman1Department of Educational Psychology, University of Nebraska-LincolnDepartment of Educational Psychology, University of Nebraska-LincolnAbstract Objective A profile of adolescent alcohol use for China that specified gender, school type and a consistent definition of alcohol use. Method A total of 1,646 papers were identified in the Chinese- and English-language literature published 2007–2015 that reported Chinese adolescent drinking rates. Selection criteria were established a priori. Thirty-two papers met all the selection criteria. Five papers were eliminated because they were found to be duplicate reports of the same data. Result The resulting sample included 26 papers—24 in Chinese and two in English, 20 describing middle school students, 12 describing high school students, and six describing vocational high school students. Eleven papers described students in more than one type of school. Last 30 day use of alcohol was, as expected, highest among vocational high school students (44.7 % males, 28.8 % females) and drinking rates were higher for high school students (36.5 % males, 21.2 % females) than for middle school students (23.6 % males, 15.3 % females). Meta-regression identified factors associated with differences in drinking rates reported in individual studies as the definition of a drink and whether data were collected by trained personnel. Location appeared important, but its effects were inconsistent across different populations, which suggests that national estimates likely blur regional differences in patterns of alcohol use. Conclusion Rates derived from this meta-analysis provide a useful reference for scholars interested in China, alcohol use, adolescents, and patterns of use. The meta-regression analysis suggested practical ways to improve adolescent alcohol surveys in China.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13690-016-0157-5AlcoholAdolescentsChina
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yonghua Feng
Ian M. Newman
spellingShingle Yonghua Feng
Ian M. Newman
Estimate of adolescent alcohol use in China: a meta-analysis
Archives of Public Health
Alcohol
Adolescents
China
author_facet Yonghua Feng
Ian M. Newman
author_sort Yonghua Feng
title Estimate of adolescent alcohol use in China: a meta-analysis
title_short Estimate of adolescent alcohol use in China: a meta-analysis
title_full Estimate of adolescent alcohol use in China: a meta-analysis
title_fullStr Estimate of adolescent alcohol use in China: a meta-analysis
title_full_unstemmed Estimate of adolescent alcohol use in China: a meta-analysis
title_sort estimate of adolescent alcohol use in china: a meta-analysis
publisher BMC
series Archives of Public Health
issn 2049-3258
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Abstract Objective A profile of adolescent alcohol use for China that specified gender, school type and a consistent definition of alcohol use. Method A total of 1,646 papers were identified in the Chinese- and English-language literature published 2007–2015 that reported Chinese adolescent drinking rates. Selection criteria were established a priori. Thirty-two papers met all the selection criteria. Five papers were eliminated because they were found to be duplicate reports of the same data. Result The resulting sample included 26 papers—24 in Chinese and two in English, 20 describing middle school students, 12 describing high school students, and six describing vocational high school students. Eleven papers described students in more than one type of school. Last 30 day use of alcohol was, as expected, highest among vocational high school students (44.7 % males, 28.8 % females) and drinking rates were higher for high school students (36.5 % males, 21.2 % females) than for middle school students (23.6 % males, 15.3 % females). Meta-regression identified factors associated with differences in drinking rates reported in individual studies as the definition of a drink and whether data were collected by trained personnel. Location appeared important, but its effects were inconsistent across different populations, which suggests that national estimates likely blur regional differences in patterns of alcohol use. Conclusion Rates derived from this meta-analysis provide a useful reference for scholars interested in China, alcohol use, adolescents, and patterns of use. The meta-regression analysis suggested practical ways to improve adolescent alcohol surveys in China.
topic Alcohol
Adolescents
China
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13690-016-0157-5
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