Binge Drinking Episodes in Young Adults: How Should We Measure Them in a Research Setting?

J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2017 Jul;78(4):502-511. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2017.78.502.

Abstract

Objective: Worldwide, consequences of binge drinking are a major health and policy concern. This article reviews contemporary binge drinking definitions as well as different questionnaires and biomarkers that have been used in research settings to examine binge drinking behavior among young adults.

Method: A review of electronic databases was conducted for binge drinking definitions, questionnaires, and biomarkers for the measurement of binge drinking in young adults (18-30 years).

Results: Binge drinking is often defined as four or more drinks for females and five or more drinks for males on an occasion or in one sitting within a designated time frame (2 weeks vs. past 30 days). Several tools and questionnaires are available to identify young adult repeated binge drinkers. Biomarkers have been used to corroborate self-reported alcohol consumption, of which direct biomarkers such as phosphatidylethanol may be useful in confirming recent heavy drinking.

Conclusions: It is important to measure binge drinking along a continuum and to use questions that allow for assessment of intensity, frequency, duration, and daily versus weekend consumption patterns. Open-ended questions that allow for intensity (number of drinks) and frequency can be used to determine dose-response relationships with respect to specific outcome measures. Direct alcohol biomarkers reflecting alcohol consumption over a period of several days are useful in conjunction with questionnaire data for identifying young adult binge drinkers.

MeSH terms

  • Alcohol Drinking / epidemiology
  • Binge Drinking / epidemiology*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Young Adult