Before Pregnancy

The data about the Women Who Had Any Alcoholic Drinks in the Past Two Years comes from the Florida Pregnancy Risk Asssessment Monitoring System (PRAMS).

PRAMS collects valuable information on maternal attitudes, behaviors, and experiences before, during, and shortly after pregnancy and tracks indicators related to maternal health, health behaviors, prenatal and postpartum care, and infant health.

In 2020, the percent of Women Who Had Any Alcoholic Drinks in the Past Two Years (PRAMS) (Overall) was 70% in Florida.

Resources:   Healthy People 2030 | Other | CDC

AGE GROUP, 2020
EDUCATION LEVEL, 2020
HOUSEHOLD INCOME, 2020
MARITAL STATUS, 2020
MEDICAID RECIPIENT, 2020
RACE/ETHNICITY, 2020
Women Who Had Any Alcoholic Drinks in the Past Two Years (PRAMS)
6/15/2024 6:35:31 PM

Data Note(s)


Data Source: Florida Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Florida Department of Health, Division of Community Health Promotion

  • Any alcoholic drink is defined as 1 glass of wine, wine cooler, can or bottle of beer, shot of liquor or mixed drink.

  • Prevalence is excluded (blank cells) from the tables for any subpopulation with a sample size less than 30, which would yield statistically unreliable estimates.

  • Confidence intervals - Because PRAMS is a random survey and all estimates of prevalence are subject to random sample errors, we include 95% confidence intervals (CI) with each prevalence (%). The confidence interval ranges appear in parentheses.

  • This is primary, quantitative data.