Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, CT, USA.
College of Health, SHORE & Whariki Research Centre, Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand.
Addiction. 2022 Dec;117(12):3024-3036. doi: 10.1111/add.16003.
This article summarizes the findings and conclusions of the third edition of Alcohol: No Ordinary Commodity. The latest revision of this book is part of a series of monographs designed to provide a critical review of the scientific evidence related to alcohol control policy from a public health perspective.
A narrative summary of the contents of the book according to five major issues.
An extensive amount of epidemiological evidence shows that alcohol is a major contributor to the global burden of disease, disability and death in high-, middle- and low-income countries. Trends in alcohol products and marketing are described, indicating that a large part of the global industry has been consolidated into a small number of transnational corporations that are expanding their operations in Asia, Africa and Latin America. The main part of the book is devoted to a review of strategies and interventions designed to prevent or minimize alcohol-related harm. Overall, the most effective strategies to protect public health are taxation that decreases affordability and restrictions on the physical availability of alcohol. A total ban on alcohol marketing is also an effective strategy to reduce consumption. In addition, drink-driving counter-measures, brief interventions with at-risk drinkers and treatment of drinkers with alcohol dependence are effective in preventing harm in high-risk contexts and groups of hazardous drinkers.
Alcohol policy is often the product of competing interests, values and ideologies, with the evidence suggesting that the conflicting interests between profit and health mean that working in partnership with the alcohol industry is likely to lead to ineffective policy. Opportunities for implementation of evidence-based alcohol policies that better serve the public good are clearer than ever before as a result of accumulating knowledge on which strategies work best.
本文总结了《酒精:非普通商品》第三版的发现和结论。这本书的最新修订版是一系列专着的一部分,旨在从公共卫生角度对与酒精控制政策相关的科学证据进行批判性评价。
根据五个主要问题对本书的内容进行叙述性总结。
大量的流行病学证据表明,酒精是高、中、低收入国家全球疾病、残疾和死亡负担的主要原因。描述了酒精产品和营销的趋势,表明全球大部分行业已整合为数家跨国公司,这些公司正在亚洲、非洲和拉丁美洲扩大业务。本书的主要部分致力于审查旨在预防或尽量减少与酒精相关的伤害的战略和干预措施。总的来说,保护公共健康的最有效战略是降低可负担性的税收和对酒精的实际供应限制。全面禁止酒精营销也是减少消费的有效策略。此外,在高风险环境和危险饮酒者群体中,酒后驾车对策、对有风险饮酒者的简短干预和对酒精依赖者的治疗措施在预防伤害方面非常有效。
酒精政策往往是利益、价值观和意识形态相互竞争的产物,有证据表明,利润和健康之间的利益冲突意味着与酒精行业合作可能导致政策无效。由于积累了关于哪些策略最有效的知识,实施更符合公众利益的循证酒精政策的机会比以往任何时候都更加清晰。