Staras Stephanie A S, Livingston Melvin D, Christou Alana M, Jernigan David H, Wagenaar Alexander C
Department of Health Outcomes and Policy, Institute for Child Health Policy, College of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Addiction. 2014 Jun;109(6):904-12. doi: 10.1111/add.12493. Epub 2014 Mar 3.
Alcohol taxes reduce population-level excessive alcohol use and alcohol-related morbidity and mortality, yet little is known about the distribution of the effects of alcohol taxation across race/ethnicity and age subgroups. We examined the race/ethnicity- and age group-specific effects of an excise alcohol tax increase on a common and routinely collected alcohol-related morbidity indicator, sexually transmitted infections.
We used an interrupted time series design to examine the effect of a 2009 alcohol tax increase in Illinois, USA on new cases of two common sexually transmitted infections (chlamydia and gonorrhea) reported to the US National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System from January 2003 to December 2011 (n = 108 repeated monthly observations). We estimated the effects of the tax increase on infection rates in the general population and within specific race/ethnicity and age subgroups using mixed models accounting for temporal trends and median income.
Following the Illinois alcohol tax increase, state-wide rates of gonorrhea decreased 21% [95% confidence Interval (CI) = -25.7, -16.7] and chlamydia decreased 11% [95% CI = -17.8, -4.4], resulting in an estimated 3506 fewer gonorrhea infections and 5844 fewer chlamydia infections annually. The null hypothesis of homogenous effects by race/ethnicity and age was rejected (P < 0.0001). Significant reductions were observed among non-Hispanic blacks: gonorrhea rates decreased 25.6% (95% CI = -30.0, -21.0) and chlamydia rates decreased 14.7% (95% CI = -20.9, -8.0). Among non-Hispanics, point estimates suggest decreases were highest among 25-29-year-olds.
Increased alcohol taxes appear to reduce sexually transmitted infections, especially among subpopulations with high disease burdens, such as non-Hispanic blacks.
酒精税可减少人群层面的过度饮酒以及与酒精相关的发病率和死亡率,但对于酒精税的影响在种族/族裔和年龄亚组中的分布情况却知之甚少。我们研究了消费税提高对一种常见且常规收集的与酒精相关的发病率指标——性传播感染的种族/族裔和年龄组特异性影响。
我们采用中断时间序列设计,研究了2009年美国伊利诺伊州提高酒精税对2003年1月至2011年12月期间向美国国家法定传染病监测系统报告的两种常见性传播感染(衣原体和淋病)新病例的影响(n = 108个每月重复观测值)。我们使用考虑时间趋势和中位数收入的混合模型,估计了税收增加对总体人群以及特定种族/族裔和年龄亚组感染率的影响。
伊利诺伊州提高酒精税后,全州淋病发病率下降了21% [95%置信区间(CI)= -25.7,-16.7],衣原体发病率下降了11% [95% CI = -17.8,-4.4],估计每年淋病感染减少3506例,衣原体感染减少5844例。种族/族裔和年龄的同质效应零假设被拒绝(P < 0.0001)。在非西班牙裔黑人中观察到显著下降:淋病发病率下降25.6%(95% CI = -30.0,-21.0),衣原体发病率下降14.7%(95% CI = -20.9,-8.0)。在非西班牙裔中,点估计表明25 - 29岁人群的下降幅度最大。
提高酒精税似乎可减少性传播感染,尤其是在疾病负担较高的亚人群中,如非西班牙裔黑人。