Department of Epidemiology and Health Policy Research, University of Florida, College of Medicine, Gainesville, Florida 32610, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2010 Nov;34(11):1915-21. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2010.01280.x.
Over a hundred studies have established the effects of beverage alcohol taxes and prices on sales and drinking behaviors. Yet, relatively few studies have examined effects of alcohol taxes on alcohol-related mortality. We evaluated effects of multiple changes in alcohol tax rates in the state of Florida from 1969 to 2004 on disease (not injury) mortality.
A time-series quasi-experimental research design was used, including non-alcohol deaths within Florida and other states' rates of alcohol-related mortality for comparison. A total of 432 monthly observations of mortality in Florida were examined over the 36-year period. Analyses included ARIMA, fixed-effects, and random-effects models, including a noise model, tax independent variables, and structural covariates.
We found significant reductions in mortality related to chronic heavy alcohol consumption following legislatively induced increases in alcohol taxes in Florida. The frequency of deaths (t = -2.73, p = 0.007) and the rate per population (t = -2.06, p = 0.04) declined significantly. The elasticity effect estimate is -0.22 (t = -1.88, p = 0.06), indicating a 10% increase in tax is associated with a 2.2% decline in deaths.
Increased alcohol taxes are associated with significant and sizable reductions in alcohol-attributable mortality in Florida. Results indicate that 600 to 800 lives per year could be saved if real tax rates were returned to 1983 levels (when the last tax increase occurred). Findings highlight the role of tax policy as an effective means for reducing deaths associated with chronic heavy alcohol use.
已有百余项研究证实了饮料酒税和价格对销售和饮酒行为的影响。然而,相对较少的研究调查了酒税对与酒精相关的死亡率的影响。我们评估了 1969 年至 2004 年佛罗里达州多次调整酒税税率对疾病(非伤害)死亡率的影响。
采用时间序列准实验研究设计,包括佛罗里达州和其他州的非酒精性死亡和与酒精相关的死亡率数据进行比较。在 36 年期间共检查了佛罗里达州 432 个月的死亡率观察值。分析包括 ARIMA、固定效应和随机效应模型,包括噪声模型、独立于税收的变量以及结构协变量。
我们发现,佛罗里达州立法提高酒税后,与慢性重度饮酒相关的死亡率显著降低。死亡频率(t = -2.73,p = 0.007)和人口死亡率(t = -2.06,p = 0.04)显著下降。弹性效应估计值为-0.22(t = -1.88,p = 0.06),表明税收增加 10%,与死亡人数减少 2.2%相关。
提高酒税与佛罗里达州与酒精相关的死亡率显著且大幅度降低相关。结果表明,如果实际税率恢复到 1983 年(上次增税时)的水平,每年可能会挽救 600 至 800 条生命。研究结果突出了税收政策作为减少与慢性重度饮酒相关的死亡的有效手段的作用。