Center for Health Behavior & Implementation Science, RTI International, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Center for Health Behavior & Implementation Science, RTI International, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Int J Drug Policy. 2023 Sep;119:104148. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2023.104148. Epub 2023 Aug 2.
The World Health Organization's list of cost-effective alcohol control policies is a widely-used resource that highlights strategies to address alcohol-related harms. However, there is more evidence on how recommended policies impact harms to people who drink alcohol-such as physical health problems caused by heavy alcohol use-than on secondhand harms inflicted on someone other than the person drinking alcohol, i.e., alcohol's harms to others. In this essay, we describe evidence of impacts of alcohol policy on harms to women and children resulting from men's alcohol consumption, as well as options for making policies more relevant for reducing intimate partner violence and child abuse. We begin with an overview of harms to women and children resulting from men's alcohol consumption and review cost-effective alcohol policies with potential to reduce these harms based on likely mechanisms of action. Next, we present a rapid review of reviews to describe existing evidence of impacts of these policies on the outcomes of physical violence, sexual violence, and child abuse and neglect. We found little evidence of systematic evaluation of impacts of these important alcohol policies on harms to women and children. Thus, we advocate for increased attention in evaluation research to the impacts of alcohol policies on harms experienced by women and children who are exposed to men who drink alcohol. We also argue for more consideration of a broader range of policies and interventions to reduce these specific types of harm. Finally, we present a conceptual model illustrating how alcohol policies may be supplemented with other interventions specifically tailored to reduce alcohol-related harms commonly experienced by women and children as a result of men's alcohol use.
世界卫生组织的成本效益高的酒精控制政策清单是一个被广泛使用的资源,突出了针对与酒精相关的危害的策略。然而,关于推荐政策对饮酒者自身健康问题等所造成的伤害的影响的证据比关于除饮酒者以外的其他人所遭受的间接伤害的证据要多,即酒精对他人的危害。在本文中,我们描述了酒精政策对男性饮酒导致的妇女和儿童伤害的影响的证据,以及使政策更能减少亲密伴侣暴力和儿童虐待的相关选项。我们首先概述了男性饮酒对妇女和儿童造成的伤害,并根据可能的作用机制,审查了具有降低这些伤害潜力的具有成本效益的酒精政策。接下来,我们对综述进行了快速审查,以描述这些政策对身体暴力、性暴力和儿童虐待和忽视的结果的现有影响证据。我们发现,对这些重要的酒精政策对妇女和儿童伤害的影响进行系统评估的证据很少。因此,我们主张在评估研究中更加关注酒精政策对接触饮酒男性的妇女和儿童所遭受的伤害的影响。我们还主张更多地考虑更广泛的政策和干预措施,以减少这些特定类型的伤害。最后,我们提出了一个概念模型,说明酒精政策如何可以通过专门针对减少由于男性饮酒而导致的妇女和儿童普遍经历的与酒精相关的伤害的其他干预措施来加以补充。