American Drinking Habits 2006

ONE WORD BARFINDER

BEER IS BACK!

Americans Drinking More C2H5OH
Survey Shows Beer Is Back On Top As Alcoholic Drink Of Choice
Aug. 1, 2006

Fast Fact
The percentage of drinkers who named wine as their drink of choice has increased steadily ... but beer was the winner in this year's poll with 41% of Americans naming it their drink of choice.
(WebMD) Americans are drinking alcohol more often, and beer is back on top as the beverage of choice, according to a new Gallup Poll.
Although the number of Americans who drink alcohol is holding steady, the poll shows those who drink are imbibing more frequently and drinking more drinks each week compared with a decade ago.
Drinkers are also now slightly more likely to name beer as their alcoholic beverage of choice, which researchers say is a return to the pattern seen before last year's poll when beer and wine tied for the top drink.

American Drinking Habits

The poll, conducted July 6-9 among a national sample of 1,007 people aged 18 and older, showed 64% of Americans say they drink alcoholic beverages.
Researchers say the percentage of Americans who say they drink has changed little over time, averaging about 63% since Gallup began surveying Americans about drinking habits in 1939.
However, the most recent poll shows the frequency of drinking has risen over the last 10 years. The 2006 poll showed 71% of American drinkers said they had an alcoholic drink in the last week, which is significantly higher than the 54% who said the same in 1996.
Also on the rise is the number of drinks Americans are drinking. The poll shows those who drink alcohol report drinking an average of 4.5 drinks per week, compared with 2.8 in 1996.
Recent studies have suggested that drinking alcohol in moderation -- particularly wine -- may promote better health, and researchers say the increase in number of drinks per week may be a reflection of this.
The percentage of drinkers who named wine as their drink of choice has increased steadily from 27% in 1992 to a peak of 39% last year, when it narrowly topped beer in popularity. But beer was the winner in this year's poll with 41% of Americans naming it their drink of choice compared with 33% opting for wine and 23% choosing liquor.
Other findings of the survey include:

Who's Drinking and Who's Not

# Drinking is less common among lower-income households; 82% of Americans who live in upper-income households (annual incomes of $75,000 or more) say they drink compared with 44% of those with incomes less than $30,000.
# Senior citizens (over age 65) were less likely to drink than Americans in other age groups.
# Fewer than half of those who report a strong commitment to their faith said they drink; 48% of weekly churchgoers say they drink alcohol compared with 69% of those who attend religious services less frequently and 72% of those who seldom or never attend.

Sources: Gallup Organization, conducted July 6-9, 2006.

By Jennifer Warner, M.A.
Reviewed by Louise Chang, M.D.
source: cbsnews.com
GLOBAL HANGOVER FACTBOOK
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

HUMAN RIGHTS INFORMATION BY COUNTRY AND REGION Asia and the Pacific Europe Middle East and North Africa Africa Americas Human rights themes


USA/C2H5OH
New Zealand Drinking
World Drinking Ages
China shifts drinking age
Realism - an American Hangover Cure
A Kenian Hangover
Afghanistan is Opium
Drinking & Flying
Sharing needles in the Urals
Killing Thai drug users
Iran: Islam overdose
The drums of war
Capture of Sadam
Guard pigs" in Israel
The Widening Crusade
Gulf Wars II - prolonged
9/11/1973 The Chilenian Hangover
NEW MARKET:
Futures On Terror Attacks

India: facts, lies and GM potatoes
A Tyrant in the Shadows
After Morocco's bombings
EATING THE WORLD
we become what we fight!
Bush & Media
Who will profit from this war?
An American myth rides into the sunset
on the eve
NOW PLAYING:
GULF WARS

About Weapons of Mass Destuction
A war Crime or an Act of War?
GULF WARS- starring: Bush Admin
Boozing in Baghdad
Miami - falling into the gap
U.S.'s Powerful Weapon in Iran: TV
We will laugh and cry and fight for our right to party!
Remember the Sari Club

French Prostitutes March in Protest
Bush's Iraque Adventure - A Trap?
Teetotaler to win turkish vote??
Rice wine producers form cartel
The Kuta Bali Bombing
Women in Iraq
Illegal Workers do Europe's Heavy Lifting
Hoover's F.B.I. and the Mafia: Case of Bad Bedfellows Grows
OSLO - Europe's overdose capital
Afghan opium down
Now We Are All Americans
Fatwah Urging Jihad Against Americans


Vietnam Veterans Against the War
History of the U.S. War in Vietnam


US & EU Differ over Colombian drugs
Coke and Dotcoms
Modern Day Slavery
USA: Drug abuse among young
Folgen des Akoholkonsumes in D-Land
Will Common Sense Ever Govern US Drug Policies?
Opium&Heroin production in Burma
Booze and Drugs in Thailand
Thai Sex Industry
Canabis in Berlin
Russian Jews in Israel
New Nazis on the rise in Germany?

Never trust a teetotaler, Sir Winston Churchill vs. Adolf Hitler



© changnoi.com 2540-2550

GlobalHangoverGuide®
Drink Locator Fact Book Jokes Hall of Fame Magazine Add A Venue Newsletter Magazine Hangover Clinic
Afghanistan  Australia   Austria   Azerbaidjan   Belgium   Brazil   Bulgaria   Canada   China   Colombia   Croatia   Cuba   Czech Republic   Denmark   Egypt   Finland   France   Germany   Great Britain   Greece   Grenada   Guatemala   Hong Kong   Hungary   Iceland   India   Indonesia   Iran   Iraq   Ireland   Israel   Italy   Japan   Jordan   Kazakhstan  Kenya   Lebanon   Latvia   Lithuania   Macau   Malaysia   Malta   Mexico   Mongolia   Morocco   Namibia   Nepal   Netherlands   New Zealand   Nicaragua   Norway   Palestine   Pakistan   Peru   Philippines   Poland   Portugal   Reunion (French)   Romania   Russia   Singapore   South Africa   South Korea   Spain   Sweden   Switzerland   Tanzania   Thailand   Turkey  Tokelau   UAE   USA   Venezuela   Vietnam  

respect:
Brel  Florian   Franz Ilg  Gainsbourg   Paris Bar   PhuThai  hoffmeister.tv  Kuckuck Berlin  Sabel Guissé  sehrgut.de  rflxe.org  sehrclever.de  Tattoo Convention  Victoria Bar 
news is what someone somewhere wants to suppress
the rest is advertising