Alcohol consumption
In 2018–19, about 30% of First Nations people aged 15 and over had not consumed alcohol in the previous 12 months or had never consumed alcohol – 27% in non-remote areas and 41% in remote areas (ABS 2019). The proportion of the First Nations population who had abstained from alcohol was higher than in the non-Indigenous population.
In 2018–19, 50% of First Nations people aged 15 years and over reported drinking alcohol at levels exceeding the single occasion risk guideline (more than 4 drinks) at least once in the 2 weeks prior to the survey. This was a decrease of 4 percentage points since 2012–13 (54%).
The proportion of First Nations people aged 18 and over who exceeded the single occasion risk guideline generally decreased with age from 65% of those aged 18–24 to 35% of those aged 55 and over (Figure 5.12). Among those aged 15–17, 18% reported drinking at levels that exceeded the single occasion risk guidelines.
In 2018–19, 18% of First Nations people aged 15 years and over drank at levels that exceeded the NHMRC lifetime risk guidelines that were current at the time the survey was conducted (no more than 2 standard drinks per day on average). A higher proportion of First Nations males (28%) exceeded the guidelines than First Nations females (10%) (Figure 5.12).
Figure 5.12: Risky alcohol consumption among First Nations adults by age group, and by sex and remoteness, 2018–19
In 2014–15, about 1 in 20 (5.9%) First Nations people aged 15 and over in non-remote areas, and 1 in 10 (8.9%) in remote areas, reported alcohol-related problems as a personal stressor in the past 12 months.
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