Alcohol Health Warning Study
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Emily Brennan, Centre for Behavioural Research in Cancer, Cancer Council Victoria
Version: View help for Version V1
| Name | File Type | Size | Last Modified |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
application/x-stata-dta | 314.6 KB | 10/05/2022 10:18:PM |
Project Citation:
Project Description
Scope of Project
Methodology
Participants reported age, gender, highest level of educational attainment and if they were a parent or guardian. Socioeconomic status was determined using participants’ postcode and an Index of Relative Socio-Economic Disadvantage.
Drinking characteristics
Participants’ past 12 month usual pattern of alcohol consumption was measured using the graduated quantity–frequency measure. Participants were provided with a visual guide of the number of standard drinks (one standard drink in Australia = 10g alcohol) in common servings of different alcohol types. Applying the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council’s 2009 Low-Risk Drinking Guidelines, current at the time of the study, participants were classified as at high risk of long-term harm (LTH) if they consumed > two drinks per day on average and/or at high risk of short-term harm (STH) if they had > four drinks on any occasion at least once a month. Participants also indicated the perceived amount of alcohol they currently drink, with ‘self-perceived high-risk drinkers’ classified as those who responded that “I definitely drink more than I should” or “I probably drink more than I should”, and ‘self-perceived low-risk drinkers’ as those who responded with either “the amount I drink is ok” or “I could drink more than I do”.
Intentions to reduce drinking
Immediately post exposure, participants indicated on an ordinal scale (1 = “definitely will not”, 2 = “probably will not”, 3 = “probably will”, and 4 = “definitely will”) the extent to which “In the next week, will you try to drink less alcohol”, and the extent to which they will in the next month, “reduce how often you drink alcohol”, “reduce the amount of alcohol you have on each drinking occasion,” and “avoid drinking alcohol completely”. Responses were dichotomised and classified as ‘definitely/probably will not’ or ‘definitely/probably will’. Since the items “reduce how often you drink alcohol” and “reduce the amount of alcohol you have on each drinking occasion’’ were highly correlated (polychoric correlation ρ = .72), they were combined, with those who answered ‘definitely/probably will’ for either or both statements being classified as ‘definitely/probably will’ in the combined variable.
Past week alcohol consumption was assessed at follow-up using the seven-day follow-back measure.
Intentions to reduce drinking in the next week and month at follow-up were measured using the same questions as those completed immediately post-exposure.
Readiness to change
We used the readiness to change ruler for decreased drinking at follow-up. Participants indicated their readiness to reduce their drinking using an 11-point scale (with the anchor points of 0 = “I never think about drinking less”, 3 = “sometimes I think about drinking less”, 5 = “I have decided to drink less”, 7 = “I am already trying to cut back on my drinking”, and 10 = “my drinking has changed, I now drink less than before”).
Frequency of thinking about alcohol-related health risks in the past week was adapted from tobacco HWL studies and assessed at follow-up. Participants were asked “In the past week, to what extent, if at all, did you think about the health risks associated with drinking alcohol?”. Responses were assessed using a four-point scale (with the option of selecting “don’t know”) and dichotomised for analysis (‘somewhat/a lot’ or ‘not at all/a little/don’t know’).
Awareness of alcohol-related health harms
Participants were asked if “Consuming alcohol would”: (i) “increase your risk of cancer”; (ii) “increase your risk of liver damage”; and (iii) “increase your risk of heart disease” at follow-up. Given that the DrinkWise labels provided the message that ‘It is safest not to drink during pregnancy’, participants were also asked if “Consuming alcohol would”: (iv) “increase the risk of a woman experiencing pregnancy complications”. Responses were assessed on a seven-point scale and dichotomised for analysis (‘slightly agree/agree/strongly agree’ or ‘strongly disagree/disagree/slightly disagree/neither agree nor disagree’).
Negative emotional arousal
At follow-up, participants were asked: “Thinking about the images of alcohol containers I’ve seen as part of this study, I felt: disgusted / afraid / uncomfortable / worried”. Responses were rated on seven-point scales with three anchor points (1 = “not at all”, 4 = “moderately”, and 7 = “very”). A scale indicating participants’ negative emotional arousal was created by taking the mean of the four items (Cronbach’s α = .92).
Positive emotional arousal
At follow-up, participants were asked: “Thinking about the images of alcohol containers I’ve seen as part of this study, I felt: excited / pleased”. Responses were rated on seven-point scales with three anchor points (1 = “not at all”, 4 = “moderately”, and 7 = “very”). A scale indicating participants’ positive emotional arousal was created by taking the mean of the two items (Cronbach’s α = .85).
Show/mention images to others
At follow-up, participants were asked: (i) “As part of this project, you received emails over the past eight days to view images of different alcoholic drinks. Did you show any of the images to other people?” and (ii) “Did you talk about the images with anyone, even if you didn’t show them an image?”. Response options were ‘yes’ and ‘no’. Responses were combined so that if the participant answered yes to one or both items, they were coded as ‘Yes, shared/talked’ versus ‘No, did not share/talk’.
Related Publications
Published Versions
Found a serious problem with the data, such as disclosure risk or copyrighted content? Let us know.
This material is distributed exactly as received from the data depositor. As of April 2026, depositors are required to submit study materials in accessible formats. ICPSR has not reviewed, checked, or processed this material. For additional information about the study, please contact the investigator(s) directly. If you have questions about the accessibility of materials distributed by ICPSR or require further assistance, please visit ICPSR's Accessibility Center.