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Adolescents’ alcohol use is decreasing in Europe but not in all of the countries. Why?

Publishing year
2026
Type of Document
Peer reviewed article/paper
URN
https://doi.org/10.1080/14659891.2022.2144504
Document language
English
Authors
V. Månsson, A. Hammarberg, M. Hårdstedt & R. LoMartire
Journal / Publication name
Journal of Substance Use
Abstract

Background and Objective

Recent research has suggested a decline in alcohol use among students, however, only a few papers offer to explain why adolescents are drinking less. According to ESPAD, adolescents’ alcohol use is decreasing in Europe, but only Hungary shows an increasing trend. The paper aims to give explanation for the opposite trends.

Methods

The analysis is based on a cross-national dataset, ESPAD in 2003 and 2019, involving 25 countries (N = 157,790). The background variables cover family, school, leisure time, risk behaviors. Chi-square tests, logit explanatory model, KHB method were applied.

Results

In Hungary and in countries with decline the strongest relation with current alcohol use was found for internet use, going out, parental control, daily smoking, and alcohol intake.

Conclusions

In countries with decline and in Hungary, stronger parental control, going out less often, smoking less may contribute to a declining trend while a more widespread internet use may contribute to an increasing trend. Hungary shows the same pattern as the countries with decline, so other factors such as a lack of alcohol policy, permissive attitudes, media representation, health awareness may be behind the different trends. Future research should be directed toward providing further explanations for the opposite trends.