This report presents key findings about alcohol use and hazardous drinking among adults aged 15 years and over. These results come from the 2011/12 New Zealand Health Survey.
Health statistics
- About
- Health statistics and data sets
- Alcohol use
- Asian health
- Cancer
- Child and youth health
- Diabetes
- Disability
- District health boards
- Drug use
- Fetal and infant deaths
- Health expenditure
- Health of New Zealanders
- Hospital events
- Hospital surgical activity
- ICT usage
- Immunisation
- Inequalities
- Infectious disease
- Māori health
- Maternity and newborn
- Mental health
- Mortality
- National Screening Unit
- Nutrition
- Obesity
- Older people's health
- Oral health
- Pacific health
- Prisoner health
- Problem gambling
- Socioeconomic deprivation
- Stroke
- Suicide
- Tobacco
- Urban–rural health
- Workforce
- National collections and surveys
- Classification and Terminology
- Access and use
- Data references
- Disclaimer
Alcohol use data and stats
Statistical publications and data sets on alcohol use.
Publications
-
Published 16 April 2013
-
Published 02 June 2010The 2007/08 New Zealand Alcohol and Drug Use Survey (NZADUS) measured self-reported alcohol, illicit and other drug use for recreational purposes, including consumption patterns, risk and protective behaviours associated with alcohol and drug use, harmful effects and help seeking, among the usually resident New Zealand population aged 16–64 years living in permanent private dwellings.
-
Published 02 June 2010All NZADUS results presented in this report and some additional results are available in Excel format.
-
Published 02 January 2010This report presents the key findings about drug use and drug-related harm among New Zealand adults, from the 2007/08 New Zealand Alcohol and Drug Use Survey (NZADUS). The survey measured alcohol and drug use among over 6,500 New Zealanders aged 16–64 years from August 2007 to April 2008.
Related areas
Related websites
Page last updated: 30 May 2012

Twitter
Facebook