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The association of drinking levels and drinking attitudes among Japanese in Japan and Japanese-Americans in Hawaii and California. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates drinking attitudes and levels among Japanese in Japan and Japanese-Americans in Hawaii or California.
  • A key finding is that higher drinking levels correlate with more tolerant attitudes towards drinking across all groups, though abstainers hold stricter views on drunkenness.
  • Japanese participants showed less correlation between drinking levels and acceptable drinking attitudes compared to Japanese-Americans, who had consistent drinking habits and attitudes; additionally, Japanese had higher rates of abstention from drinking before driving, likely influenced by public education on the issue.

Article Abstract

This study examined cross-cultural differences in drinking attitudes and drinking levels and their correlation among Japanese in Japan and Japanese-Americans in Hawaii or California. In most situations, an increase in drinking levels was associated with more tolerant drinking attitudes in all three groups. Abstainers were less likely to say that getting drunk is sometimes all right, whereas the reverse was true for heavier drinkers. Drinking levels among Japanese, especially among Japanese women, were not highly associated with how much drinking was perceived as acceptable in each situation, whereas among Japanese-Americans, drinking levels were highly associated with drinking attitudes. Although the Japanese had generally tolerant attitudes toward drinking, they indicated higher abstention rates before driving than Japanese-Americans regardless of their drinking levels. This may reflect the impact of public education on drunken driving in Japan.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0899-3289(92)90016-qDOI Listing

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