Part-time work and adolescent heavy episodic drinking: the influence of family and community context
Publication type
  
            
                        Journal article
      
      
  
    Date published
  
            
                        2005 Nov 01
      
      
  
    Journal 
  
            
                        Journal of Studies on Alcohol
      
      
  
    Volume
  
            
                        66
      
      
  
    Issue
  
            
                        6
      
      
  
    Pages
  
            
                        784-794
      
      
  
    PMID
  
            
                        16459940
      
      
  
    Open Access?
  
            
                        No
      
      
  
    Abstract
  
            
                        OBJECTIVE: Previous studies on part-time work and alcohol use suggest that teenagers who work longer hours drink more heavily. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether family- and community-level factors moderate the relationship between part-time work hours and heavy episodic drinking. METHOD: Data were drawn from the Canadian Community Health Survey, a cross-sectional study of a nationally representative sample of Canadians. The survey included 8,080 respondents 15-19 years of age who reported work hours and frequency of heavy episodic drinking over the past 12 months. These respondents were located in 136 counties or municipalities across Canada. RESULTS: On average, work hours were positively associated with the frequency of heavy drinking by teenagers in the past 12 months. At the community level, the proportion of teenagers in each community drinking any alcohol was independently and positively associated with respondents' frequency of heavy drinking. In terms of moderating effects, we found that the work hours-drinking association was weaker among youth from low socioeconomic status families. Examination of community-level factors indicated that longer work hours were more strongly associated with heavy episodic drinking in communities with high rates of teen alcohol abstinence. CONCLUSIONS: Although the cross-sectional data prohibit any firm conclusions on how family and community factors influence the work-alcohol use relationship, these data suggest that interventions to reduce heavy episodic drinking among teens should address the broader environmental as well as the individual determinants