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Review Article

The prevalence of and factors related to alcohol consumption among young people in Thailand: a systematic review of observational studies

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon, , ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 337-358 | Received 08 Jul 2019, Accepted 10 Feb 2020, Published online: 24 Feb 2020
 

Abstract

Background: The present study aimed to critically review the current evidence for factors associated with alcohol consumption and its prevalence.

Method: EBSCOhost (Medline), ISI Web of Knowledge, PubMed, Scopus, TCI, and ThaiJO were systematically searched for relevant studies published between January 2000 and December 2018. Studies were included if the prevalence of current alcohol use and/or the factors associated with alcohol consumption among young people 10–24 years-old in Thailand were measured. A modified descriptive study quality appraisal assessment tool was used. The prevalence of alcohol consumption was reported by using the median and interquartile range (IQR).

Results: Thirty studies (N = 253,465) were included. The median prevalence rates of alcohol use in the past month were 18.6% (IQR = 13.32) and in the previous year were 19.03% (IQR = 41.25). The factors closely associated with alcohol use among young people were age (15 years of age and older), gender (male), education (attending grade 9 and above), religion (Buddhists).

Conclusions: This systematic review provides the prevalence rates and potential circumstances associated with alcohol consumption to guide policy development. More research is needed to gain new insight regarding psychosocial-factors, the role of parental, geographical area, and social media for further studies.

Author contributions

LT drafted the review protocol and BVR and LP commented on the protocol. LT developed the search strategy in collaboration with the searching specialist from the University of Antwerp library. Titles and abstracts of included papers screening were conducted and by TL and second screening was done by PP. The descriptive data-extraction was involved by LT and PP as well as quality assessment of selected studied. All authors were contributed to the data synthesis. LT contributed to the drafting of the final review manuscript. The final review manuscript was edited and approved by LP, TD, and BVR.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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