Snijder Mieke, Calabria Bianca, Dobbins Timothy, Knight Alice, Shakeshaft Anthony
National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC), University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Research School of Population Health, Australian National University, 62 Mills Road, Acton, ACT, Australia.
Alcohol Alcohol. 2018 Sep 1;53(5):578-585. doi: 10.1093/alcalc/agy034.
Given ongoing community concern about high rates of alcohol-related crimes (ARCs) experienced by disadvantaged populations, a more specific and nuanced understanding of factors associated with ARCs would help inform the development of more sophisticated programs and policies aimed at reducing ARCs. This study estimates rates of ARCs across all communities in New South Wales (NSW), Australia, using routinely collected police data; investigates whether there are differences between communities; and identifies individual and community characteristics that are significantly associated with higher rates of ARCs.
This study analysed routinely collected police data in New South Wales, Australia, to identify individual and community characteristics associated with alcohol-related crimes. Young people, Aboriginal Australians, socio-economically disadvantaged communities, remote and regional communities and communities with higher per capita rate of on-venue liquor licenses are at risk of alcohol-related crimes.
Age standardized rates of ARCs were calculated. A multi-level Poisson regression analysis was conducted to investigate the individual and community factors that were statistically significantly associated with higher rates of ARC, separately for Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australians.
Rates of ARCs were statistically significantly higher for Aboriginal Australians, young people (aged 13-37 years) and on weekends. ARCs varied significantly across communities, and were significantly higher in remote or regional communities, in communities with a higher per capita rate of on-venue licences, and for socio-economically disadvantaged communities for non-Aboriginal Australians, but not for Aboriginal females.
This analysis shows that the impact of national-level and jurisdictional-level legislation and policies is uneven across communities and defined populations, leaving young people, socio-economically disadvantaged communities and Aboriginal Australians at increased risk of ARCs. To more equitably reduce the exposure of all Australians to ARC, mechanisms that effectively engage vulnerable communities and defined populations, need to be developed in consultation with them, implemented and evaluated.
鉴于社区持续关注弱势群体中与酒精相关犯罪(ARC)的高发率,更具体且细致入微地了解与ARC相关的因素,将有助于为制定更完善的计划和政策提供信息,以减少ARC。本研究利用常规收集的警方数据,估算澳大利亚新南威尔士州(NSW)所有社区的ARC发生率;调查不同社区之间是否存在差异;并确定与较高ARC发生率显著相关的个人和社区特征。
本研究分析了澳大利亚新南威尔士州常规收集的警方数据,以确定与酒精相关犯罪相关的个人和社区特征。年轻人、澳大利亚原住民、社会经济弱势社区、偏远和地区社区以及人均场所酒类许可证率较高的社区面临酒精相关犯罪的风险。
计算了ARC的年龄标准化发生率。进行了多层次泊松回归分析,分别针对澳大利亚原住民和非原住民,研究与较高ARC发生率有统计学显著关联的个人和社区因素。
澳大利亚原住民、年轻人(13 - 37岁)以及周末的ARC发生率在统计学上显著更高。ARC在不同社区之间差异显著,对于非原住民澳大利亚人来说,偏远或地区社区、人均场所许可证率较高的社区以及社会经济弱势社区的ARC发生率显著更高,但澳大利亚原住民女性并非如此。
该分析表明,国家层面和辖区层面的立法与政策对不同社区和特定人群的影响不均衡,使年轻人、社会经济弱势社区和澳大利亚原住民面临更高的ARC风险。为了更公平地减少所有澳大利亚人面临ARC的风险,需要与弱势群体社区和特定人群协商制定、实施并评估能有效让他们参与进来的机制。