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Original Articles

Trends Across the Night in Patronage, Intoxication, and Licensed Venue Characteristics in Five Australian Cities

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Pages 1185-1195 | Published online: 30 May 2017
 

ABSTRACT

Background: While alcohol-related harm is reportedly greater on weekend evenings, research investigating trends in the intoxication levels of patrons and factors that increase risk of harm over the night is lacking. Objectives: The aim was to observe trends over the course of the night for patron demographics, venue characteristics and patron intoxication. Methods: Observations of licensed venues and patrons in night-time entertainment districts of five Australian cities were conducted. In total, 798 observations occurred between 9 pm and 2 am on Friday and Saturday nights across 61 unique bars, nightclubs, and pubs. Patron characteristics such as gender and percentage of patrons under 25 years of age were estimated. Measures of venue characteristics included number of patrons, percentage venue capacity, ease of patron movement, bar crowding, and time to service. Measures of intoxication included the percentage of patrons showing any signs of alcohol intoxication, percentage of patrons too intoxicated to remain in the venue, overall level of intoxication, and percentage of patrons showing signs of drug use. Results: Patron capacity increased across the night, peaking at 11 pm in bars, and 1 am in nightclubs. Patron intoxication measures increased for all venue types across the night. Patrons showed more signs of drug use in nightclubs than other venue types. Conclusions: Increasing intoxication and decreasing patron numbers later in the night provides support for restricted trading hours and improved responsible service of alcohol policies. Specific venue types should be targeted to reduce drug use in the night-time economy.

Acknowledgment

We would like to thank Nicholas Taylor and Nicolette Dimitrovski for their feedback on the final paper draft.

Declaration of interest

Peter Miller receives funding from Australian Research Council and Australian National Health and Medical Research Council, grants from NSW Government, National Drug Law Enforcement Research Fund, Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education, Cancer Council Victoria, Queensland government and Australian Drug Foundation, travel and related costs from Australasian Drug Strategy Conference. He has acted as a paid expert witness on behalf of a licensed venue and a security firm.

Funding

This study was supported by funding from the National Drug Law Enforcement Research Fund (NDLERF), an initiative of the Australian Government Department of Health. Amy Pennay is funded by a National Health and Medical Research Council Early Career Fellowship (APP1069907) and Nicolas Droste is funded by an Australian Research Council PhD Scholarship (LP110200699).

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