The study investigated gender differences in  drinking patterns and the reasons behind them among men and women in the Russian  city of Novosibirsk.  
 A mixed method, combining  quantitative and qualitative data, was conducted based on the Health, Alcohol  and Psychosocial factors In Eastern Europe cohort study. The quantitative study  included 4268 men and 5094 women aged 45–69 years; of those, 20 men and 24 women  completed an in-depth interview.  
The quantitative data revealed a large gap in drinking patterns in general between genders. Women  drank less often and much smaller quantities than that of men. For example, 19%  of men, vs. 1% of women, were classified as problem drinkers (two or more  positive answers on the CAGE questionnaire). These differences were not  explained by socioeconomic factors. Qualitative data have shown that gender  roles and a traditional culture around women's and men's drinking were the main  reasons for the reported drinking behaviour, whereby women were consistently  expected to drink much less than men in terms of preference for strong  beverages, drinking frequency and quantity of alcohol consumed.   
The study confirmed that large differences exist  between Russian men's and women's drinking; these differences may be largely  explained by gender roles. 
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