Sarah Callinan
@sarahcallinan.bsky.social
160 followers 130 following 10 posts
Principal Research Fellow at CAPR, La Trobe University. Interested in alcohol and survey research
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Reposted by Sarah Callinan
apsad-dar.bsky.social
Survey Questions on Quantity and Frequency Are Differentially Effective by Age in Predicting Future Alcohol Consumption

@sarahcallinan.bsky.social Simon D'Aquino, Ben Riordan, Jonas Raninen, Michael Livingston, Paul M. Dietze, Gerhard Gmel, Robin Room

doi.org/10.1111/dar....
sarahcallinan.bsky.social
Congratulations to @yvettemp.bsky.social who just won the Nancy Mills medal @latrobeuni.bsky.social for her fantastic PhD thesis on alcohol consumption trends during the COVID-19 pandemic. Well deserved after all her excellent work :)
sarahcallinan.bsky.social
If there are any colleagues that would like to join the CAPR AFLW tipping competition, please let me know! If you like to win, our tipping standards have historically been . . . not high.
Reposted by Sarah Callinan
Reposted by Sarah Callinan
sarahcallinan.bsky.social
When my daughter was three she kept saying she wanted "smoked" on her toast. After a good twenty minutes of questions I realised that the day before she had a smoked salmon bagel - she knew what the salmon was so the cream cheese must be "smoked"
sarahcallinan.bsky.social
Is it just me or are journal spam emails getting sarcastic and/or passive aggressive?
sarahcallinan.bsky.social
Furthermore, this focus on women does not appear to be part of broader efforts to reduce the gender gap in medical research - despite there being more papers on women overall, nearly three quarters of the medically focussed single gender alcohol studies were on men.
sarahcallinan.bsky.social
Really proud to have been a part of this absolutely massive study led by @meganpcook.bsky.social and glad to see it up online in @ijdrugpolicy.bsky.social . We found that despite men drinking more and experiencing more harm, there are more single-gender studies on women.
Reposted by Sarah Callinan
Reposted by Sarah Callinan
apsad-dar.bsky.social
Local environments, accessibility & affordability: qualitative analysis of alcohol purchasing across different SES areas #Victoria

@gabrielcaluzzi.bsky.social @klaudia8292.bsky.social @nic-alcohol.bsky.social @sarahcallinan.bsky.social @amypennay.bsky.social
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
Reposted by Sarah Callinan
brendelbored.bsky.social
Thanks to all the Bluesky people who just reply “it will get worse” to whatever you post, it both solves the problem and makes you feel better
sarahcallinan.bsky.social
Super proud of my amazing sister, Joey, graduating from her Bachelor of Nursing today!
sarahcallinan.bsky.social
Cool test-purchasing study on home delivery of alcohol out in JSAD today! Main takeaway for me: rapid delivery is *quick* - usually at the door within an hour.
jsadjournal.bsky.social
Test Purchasing of Same-Day and Rapid Online Alcohol Home Delivery in Two Australian Jurisdictions (new in @jsadjournal.bsky.social 85/6)
@sarahcallinan.bsky.social
www.jsad.com/doi/full/10....
Test Purchasing of Same-Day and Rapid Online Alcohol Home Delivery in Two Australian Jurisdictions: Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs: Vol 85, No 6
Objective: With same-day online alcohol sales increasing, there is a need to study their regulation. Test purchasing of alcohol home delivery was conducted to measure compliance with regulations for identification checks and unattended deliveries in two Australian jurisdictions (Perth, Western Australia, and Geelong, Victoria), which have differing regulations. Method: Alcohol orders for same-day or rapid (<2 hours) delivery on Friday and Saturday nights were made by research assistants ages 18–24 years in Perth (n = 34) and Geelong (n = 29). An observation checklist was used to record the delivery interaction, with a specific focus on checking photo identification at the time of delivery and whether deliveries were left unattended. Results: The average time from order to delivery for rapid deliveries was less than 1 hour in both sites (Perth = 50 minutes; Geelong = 36 minutes). More than 20% of deliveries were made without an identification check in both sites (Perth = 24%; Geelong = 21%). Conclusions: This pilot study showed that alcohol can be delivered to the home within 1 hour, and not all deliveries include an identification check at the point of delivery. These findings indicate a need for policies that empower regulators and police to undertake “mystery shopper” monitoring to reduce potential harms and improve compliance with alcohol delivery policy.
www.jsad.com