Behavioral Health and Recovery Studies, Public Health Institute, 555 12th St, Oakland, CA 94607, United States.
Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, S1330 Broadway, Suite 1100, Oakland, CA 94612, United States.
Alcohol Alcohol. 2024 Mar 16;59(3). doi: 10.1093/alcalc/agae015.
No studies have examined whether alcohol taxes may be relevant for reducing harms related to pregnant people's drinking.
We examined how beverage-specific ad valorem, volume-based, and sales taxes are associated with outcomes across three data sets. Drinking outcomes came from women of reproductive age in the 1990-2020 US National Alcohol Surveys (N = 11 659 women $\le$ 44 years); treatment admissions data came from the 1992-2019 Treatment Episode Data Set: Admissions (N = 1331 state-years; 582 436 pregnant women admitted to treatment); and infant and maternal outcomes came from the 2005-19 Merative Marketscan® database (1 432 979 birthing person-infant dyads). Adjusted analyses for all data sets included year fixed effects, state-year unemployment and poverty, and accounted for clustering by state.
Models yield no robust significant associations between taxes and drinking. Increased spirits ad valorem taxes were robustly associated with lower rates of treatment admissions [adjusted IRR = 0.95, 95% CI: 0.91, 0.99]. Increased wine and spirits volume-based taxes were both robustly associated with lower odds of infant morbidities [wine aOR = 0.98, 95% CI: 0.96, 0.99; spirits aOR = 0.99, 95% CI: 0.98, 1.00] and lower odds of severe maternal morbidities [wine aOR = 0.91, 95% CI: 0.86, 0.97; spirits aOR = 0.95, 95% CI: 0.92, 0.97]. Having an off-premise spirits sales tax was also robustly related to lower odds of severe maternal morbidities [aOR = 0.78, 95% CI: 0.64, 0.96].
Results show protective associations between increased wine and spirits volume-based and sales taxes with infant and maternal morbidities. Policies that index tax rates to inflation might yield more public health benefits, including for pregnant people and infants.
目前尚无研究探讨酒类税收是否可能有助于减少与孕妇饮酒相关的危害。
我们在三个数据集之间检验了特定饮料的从价税、基于体积的税和销售税与结果之间的关系。饮酒结果来自于美国 1990-2020 年全国酒精调查(N=11659 名≤44 岁的育龄妇女)中的育龄妇女;治疗入院数据来自于 1992-2019 年治疗事件数据集:入院(N=1331 个州年;582436 名孕妇入院治疗);婴儿和产妇结局数据来自于 2005-19 年 Merative Marketscan®数据库(1432979 名分娩人-婴儿对子)。所有数据集的调整分析均包含年度固定效应、州年失业率和贫困率,并考虑了按州聚类。
模型未显示税收与饮酒之间存在显著关联。烈酒从价税的增加与治疗入院率的降低呈显著相关[调整后的 IRR=0.95,95%CI:0.91,0.99]。增加葡萄酒和烈酒的基于体积的税收均与婴儿发病率降低显著相关[葡萄酒 aOR=0.98,95%CI:0.96,0.99;烈酒 aOR=0.99,95%CI:0.98,1.00],与严重产妇发病率降低显著相关[葡萄酒 aOR=0.91,95%CI:0.86,0.97;烈酒 aOR=0.95,95%CI:0.92,0.97]。非现场销售烈酒税的存在也与严重产妇发病率降低显著相关[aOR=0.78,95%CI:0.64,0.96]。
结果表明,增加葡萄酒和烈酒的基于体积的和销售税与婴儿和产妇发病率之间存在保护关联。对税率进行通胀指数调整的政策可能会带来更多的公共卫生效益,包括对孕妇和婴儿的效益。