Huckle, TaisiaRomeo, Jose S.Wall, MartinCallinan, SarahHolmes, JohnMeier, PetraMackintosh, Anne-MareePiazza, MarinaChaiyasong, SurasakCuong, Pham VietCasswell, Sally2019-06-192019-06-192018-03-28Drug and Alcohol Review (August 2018), 37 (Suppl. 2), S63–S71http://hdl.handle.net/10625/57614Associations between socio-economic disadvantage and heavier drinking vary depending on country-level income. These findings highlight the value of exploring cross-country differences in heavier drinking, and the importance of including country-level measurements to better elucidate relationships. Individual-level measures of disadvantage, lower education, and living in poverty, were associated with heavier drinking, consuming 8+ drinks on a typical occasion or drinking at the higher risk level, when all countries were considered together. Drinkers in the middle-income countries had a higher probability of consuming 8+ drinks on a typical occasion relative to drinkers in the high-income countries.application/pdfenALCOHOLSUBSTANCE USENON-COMMUNICABLE DISEASESSOCIO-ECONOMIC ANALYSISHEALTH POLICYREGULATIONDATA ANALYSISSOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTHGLOBALSocio-economic disadvantage is associated with heavier drinking in high but not middle-income countries participating in the International alcohol control studyPaper 7 _ Drug and Alcohol ReviewJournal Article (peer-reviewed)