2020
DOI: 10.1111/dar.13068
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Night‐time is the right time? Late‐night drinking and assaults in Finnish public and private settings

Abstract: Introduction and Aims. The risk of alcohol-related injuries and violence increases in late-night settings. We analysed temporal patterns of drinking and assaults and present an event-level analysis of connections between night-time drinking, estimated blood alcohol level, location and drinkers' age and sex. Design and Methods. Main data source is a Finnish general population (aged 18-69 years) survey carried out in 2016 (n = 1962), including event-level data on drinking occasions in the previous 7 days (n = 18… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
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“…The respondents reported drinking on 43 drinking occasions per year on average, or slightly less than weekly. The most frequently reported category of overall drinking frequency was 'once or twice a month' [35], and these occasions typically take place during weekend evenings [17], as was also seen in current results. In European comparisons, too, Finns, together with other northern and eastern European nations, have been found to drink less often but more at one time than do southern Europeans [36].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…The respondents reported drinking on 43 drinking occasions per year on average, or slightly less than weekly. The most frequently reported category of overall drinking frequency was 'once or twice a month' [35], and these occasions typically take place during weekend evenings [17], as was also seen in current results. In European comparisons, too, Finns, together with other northern and eastern European nations, have been found to drink less often but more at one time than do southern Europeans [36].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…Studies using measurements by blood or breath tests have shown modern versions of the eBAC equations to function relatively well, though they cannot capture all individual‐level variation and hence only offer an approximation of BAC [18–20]. eBACs have been successfully applied with the Finnish Drinking Habits Survey data [14, 17] and in hangover studies [21]. Here, eBAC at the end of the drinking occasion was derived using a standard formula [19], updated for the estimated water content of blood, 0.8065 [22]:…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, the tax increases may have boosted a ‘taming of Finnish drinking’: heavy episodic drinking has decreased [5], sales of non‐alcoholic beer have seen large proportional increases and the popular media have increasingly presented stories of celebrities quitting drinking temporarily or permanently. The proportion of on‐premise alcohol sales, which is connected to heavier drinking episodes [6], decreased from 25% in the mid‐1990s to 14% in 2009, but thereafter the decrease in sales applied equally to on‐ and off‐premise sales [7].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the FSDS, in Finland heavy drinking occasions make up a greater proportion of all drinking occasions taking place in licensed premises than of those taking place in homes. This is partly due to the fact that drinking in licensed premises occurs more often at night, and night-time drinking is often heavy drinking in any surroundings ( Mäkelä & Warpenius, 2020 ; Warpenius & Mäkelä, 2018 ). Thus, intoxication-related risks are accentuated in heavy drinking situations in licensed premises.…”
Section: Heavy Episodic Drinking and Risky Situationsmentioning
confidence: 99%