@article { , title = {Alcohol purchasing by ill heavy drinkers; cheap alcohol is no single commodity.}, abstract = {Objectives Potential strategies to address alcohol misuse remain contentious. We aim to characterise the drink purchases of one population group: heavy drinkers in contact with Scottish health services. We contrast our findings with national sales data and explore the impact of socio-economic status on purchasing behaviour. Study design Cross-sectional study comparing alcohol purchasing and consumption by heavy drinkers in Edinburgh and Glasgow during 2012. Methods 639 patients with serious health problems linked to alcohol (recruited within NHS hospital clinics (in- and out-patient settings) 345 in Glasgow, 294 in Edinburgh) responded to a questionnaire documenting demographic data and last week's or a ‘typical’ weekly consumption (type, brand, volume, price, place of purchase). Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation quintile was derived as proxy of sociodemographic status. Results Median consumption was 184.8 (IQR = 162.2) UK units/week paying a mean of 39.7 pence per alcohol unit (£0.397). Off-sales accounted for 95\% of purchases with 85\% of those}, doi = {10.1016/j.puhe.2015.08.013}, eissn = {1476-5616}, issn = {0033-3506}, issue = {12}, journal = {Public Health}, pages = {1571-1578}, publicationstatus = {Published}, publisher = {Elsevier}, url = {http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/id/eprint/9159}, volume = {129}, keyword = {304 Factors affecting social behavior, 613 Personal health & safety, RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine, Alcohol, heavy drinkers, price, drink purchasing;}, year = {2015}, author = {Gill, J. and Chick, J. and Black, H. and Rees, C. and O'May, F. and Rush, R. and McPake, B.A.} }