Increased Cigarette Tax is Associated with Reductions in Alcohol Consumption in a Longitudinal U.S. Sample
Young‐Wolff K, Kasza KA, Hyland AJ, McKee SA. Increased Cigarette Tax is Associated with Reductions in Alcohol Consumption in a Longitudinal U.S. Sample. Alcohol Clinical And Experimental Research 2013, 38: 241-248. PMID: 23930623, PMCID: PMC3830619, DOI: 10.1111/acer.12226.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAlcohol consumptionPublic health benefitsInverse associationCigarette taxesLongitudinal U.S. sampleHealth benefitsYoung adult smokersSmoking-related outcomesFrequency of bingeBaseline alcohol consumptionNational Epidemiological SurveyBinge drinking frequencyMale smokersAdult smokersAlcohol consumersStratified analysisCigarette taxationDrinking statusEpidemiological studiesMultiple linear regression analysisHazardous drinkersSmokersEpidemiological surveyHealth behaviorsLinear regression analysis