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Original Article

Gender, Health Beliefs, Health Behaviors, and Alcohol Consumption

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Pages 483-497 | Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

We conducted a study of the relationship between health beliefs, health practices, and alcohol consumption among women and men using the Health Belief Model (HBM). The study sample (N – 41,104) was drawn from the 1990 National Health Interview Survey. A 15% random sample was selected from the total data set for the purpose of selecting variables. Alcohol consumption was defined as a health-related behavior and was regressed on demographic characteristics, health beliefs, and health practices. Quantity and frequency of alcohol consumption were assessed for each gender, using the HBM. The HBM explained similar amounts of the variance in alcohol use for women and men. Quantity of alcohol consumed accounted for more variance than did frequency of consumption. We conclude that health beliefs and behaviors are related to alcohol consumption after adjustment for demographic characteristics, and that differences exist between perceived risks and behaviors for both women and men.

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