ABSTRACT: National Alcohol Surveys: Advancing Epidemiologic Analyses of 21st Century Drinking
Hazardous alcohol use remains one of the most common preventable causes of morbidity and mortality in the
US and it manifests major racial/ethnic and other disparities. Nationally representative surveys repeated over
time provide a means to advance survey methods, monitor trends in alcohol use overall and in sub-groups, and
investigate timely health topics related to alcohol use. The Alcohol Research Group and its Center have
conducted a series of National Alcohol Surveys (NAS) for forty years, and are proposing in this Project to conduct
the 15th edition of the NAS in 2023-2024 (termed N15). Through the implementation of the N15 we will respond
to challenges to modern-day survey research by employing a multi-mode, adaptive survey design. This will
include a fully web-based survey using address-based sampling, and probability and non-probability web panels.
Further, this will be the first NAS to include biosample collection using dried blood spots (DBS). Including an
additional NAS in the series will expand the trend data available for framing recent changes in alcohol
consumption patterns, which is also essential for age-period-cohort models for understanding components of
these trends. With NAS series data from 2000-2020 we propose to evaluate racial/ethnic and socioeconomic
disparities in alcohol use and alcohol problems, and risk relationships between alcohol use patterns and
problems using causal inference methods including instrumental variables based on alcohol tax estimates and
other policy measures. Such methods have yet to be applied to the study of disparities in alcohol-related
problems. Capitalizing on the expanded trends data, we propose to examine trends for total and beverage-
specific alcohol volume, alcohol use disorder, and co-use of alcohol with marijuana and other drugs from 1979
or 1984, dependent on the availability of measures, to 2024 with age-period-cohort decompositions. Alcohol and
drug co-use, particularly cannabis, is especially timely given the legalization of recreational marijuana use in
many states and the ongoing opioid crisis. Psychological distress (PD) is a likely driver of the opioid crisis and
“deaths of despair”. Recent NAS editions have included measures of PD, a common problem for which alcohol
use is a known risk factor. However, less well understood are the individual- and environmental-level moderators
and biological mediators of this relationship. Collecting DBS samples will enable the study of inflammation as a
biological mediator of the relationship between alcohol use and PD, which could inform future research and
prevention interventions. Further, a better understanding of the moderators of the relationship between alcohol
use and PD, from individual- to community-level characteristics, could help to prioritize groups to receive
prevention interventions. In summary, this project proposes data collection and analyses that can advance both
methodological issues and substantive research questions with the aim of better understanding and addressing
21st century drinking and its trends, correlates and consequences.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PUBLIC HEALTH RELEVANCE
The implementation of the 2024 National Alcohol Survey will deepen our knowledge of how to collect high quality
survey data and biological samples, responding to contemporary survey research challenges. Expanding the
NAS series to 45 years will provide us with new data to develop and examine up-to-date trends in alcohol use
and problems, and potential disparities in the risk for alcohol-related problems across gender, socioeconomic
and racial/ethnic groups. We will also learn whether inflammation partially explains alcohol's effect on
psychological distress, and address disparities in these effects among racial/ethnic groups, level of education,
and neighborhood status.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AddressAdultAgeAlcohol abuseAlcohol consumptionAlcoholic beverage heavy drinkerAlcoholsAnxietyAreaBackBeveragesBiologicalBlack PopulationsBloodBlood TestsCannabisCensusesCessation of lifeCharacteristicsCollectionCommunitiesConsumptionDataData AnalysesData CollectionDisparityDrynessEducational StatusElderlyEpidemiologyEthnic OriginEthnic PopulationFutureGenderHealthHeavy DrinkingIndividualInflammationInterdisciplinary StudyInternetKnowledgeLatino PopulationLearningLegalLinkLongitudinal trendsMarijuanaMeasuresMediatorMental DepressionMental HealthMethodologyMethodsModelingModernizationMonitorMorbidity - disease rateNR4A1 geneNeighborhoodsOnline SystemsOutcomePatternPharmaceutical PreparationsPoliciesPopulationPositioning AttributeProbabilityRaceRecreationResearchResearch PersonnelRespondentRiskRisk FactorsSalesSamplingSeriesSourceSpottingsStandardizationSubgroupSurvey MethodologySurveysSymptomsTaxesTechniquesTestingTimeWomanalcohol effectalcohol epidemiologyalcohol measurementalcohol related problemalcohol researchalcohol riskalcohol use disorderburden of illnesscohortdesigndrinkingethnic disparityfallsgender differencegroup interventionhazardous drinkingimprovedinflammatory markerinnovationlow socioeconomic statusmarijuana legalizationmarijuana usemiddle agemortalityneighborhood disadvantageopioid epidemicperceived stresspilot testpopulation surveypreventive interventionpsychological distresspublic health relevancepublic policy on alcoholracial disparityracial populationrecruitsociodemographicssocioeconomic disparitysocioeconomicstrendtrend analysis
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
CFDA Code
DUNS Number
128663390
UEI
NJH3YBU1VHB7
Project Start Date
01-July-1981
Project End Date
28-February-2026
Budget Start Date
01-March-2024
Budget End Date
28-February-2025
Project Funding Information for 2024
Total Funding
$430,470
Direct Costs
$386,912
Indirect Costs
$43,558
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2024
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
$430,470
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5P50AA005595-44 6920
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