Australians’ Perceptions of the Potential Effects of Increased Access to Alcohol via Autonomous Delivery Services: A Multi-Method Study

Published in Addictive Behaviors, Vol. 148, 107872, 2024

This multi-method study examines Australians’ perceptions of how increased access to alcohol via autonomous delivery services could affect consumption patterns and public health outcomes. The findings inform policy considerations around the regulation of autonomous delivery technologies.

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S. Pettigrew, L. Booth, V. Farrar, J. Brown, B. Godic, R. Vidanaarachchi, C. Karl and J. Thompson, “Australians’ Perceptions of the Potential Effects of Increased Access to Alcohol via Autonomous Delivery Services: A Multi-Method Study,” Addictive Behaviors, vol. 148, pp. 107872, 2024, doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2023.107872.

BibTeX

@article{pettigrew2024australians,
  title={Australians' perceptions of the potential effects of increased access to alcohol via autonomous delivery services: A multi-method study},
  author={Pettigrew, Simone and Booth, Leon and Farrar, Victoria and Brown, Julie and Godic, Branislava and Vidanaarachchi, Rajith and Karl, Charles and Thompson, Jason},
  journal={Addictive Behaviors},
  volume={148},
  pages={107872},
  year={2024},
  publisher={Pergamon}
}