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Strategies to Reduce Alcohol-Related Harms and Costs in Canada: A Comparison of Provincial Policies. Presented by Norman Giesbrecht CPHA Conference, May 28, 2014, Toronto. Authors. Norman Giesbrecht , Centre for Addiction & Mental Health, Toronto
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Strategies to Reduce Alcohol-Related Harms and Costs in Canada:A Comparison of Provincial Policies Presented by Norman Giesbrecht CPHA Conference, May 28, 2014, Toronto
Authors Norman Giesbrecht, Centre for Addiction & Mental Health, Toronto Ashley Wettlaufer, Centre for Addiction & Mental Health, Toronto Stephanie Simpson, Centre for Addiction & Mental Health, Toronto Nicole April, Institut national de santé publique du Québec, Québec City Mark Asbridge, Dalhousie University, Halifax Samantha Cukier, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore Robert Mann, Centre for Addiction & Mental Health, Toronto Janet McAllister, Centre for Addiction & Mental Health, London Andrew Murie, Mothers Against Drunk Driving - Canada, Oakville Chris Pauley, Dalhousie University, Halifax Laurie Plamondon, Institut national de santé publique du Québec, Québec City Tim Stockwell, Centre for Addictions Research of BC, Victoria Gerald Thomas, Gerald Thomas & Associates, Summerland, BC Kara Thompson, Centre for Addictions Research of BC, Victoria Kate Vallance, Centre for Addictions Research of BC, Victoria
Alcohol-Related Harms & Social Costs in Canada Alcohol is a leading risk factor for death, disease and disability (WHO 2014). Significant economic costs $14.6 billion in 2002 for Canada. Associated with injuries, trauma, violence and social disruptions. Contributes to health inequities. Population level of drinking is associated with level of harm from alcohol
What can be done to reduce harm & costs? Reduce overall consumption and high-risk drinking by: Implementing more effective policies and prevention strategies, and Strengthening and expanding evidence-based policies already in place.
Aims of the project Collecting, assessing and disseminating up-to-date alcohol policy information. Highlighting exemplary efforts in Canada. Working with stakeholders to support knowledge exchange activities and implementation of effective alcohol policies. In order to encourage evidence-based approaches to alcohol policy in Canada
Methodology 1. Selecting the 10 policy dimensions and indicators A review of the literature and best practices including: Babor et al 2010, Oxford U. Press; Anderson et al. 2009 Lancet; CCSA 2007, National Strategy; WHO 2010 Global Strategy - Alcohol 2. Development of the scoring rubric Scaled indicator scores (10 dimensions and 75 indicators) Weighted policy dimensions (reach x effectiveness) Review by three external international experts 3. Data collection Standardized data collection template including policies & regulations up to October 2012
Methodology (continued) 4. Data verification Ministry of Health, Ministry responsible for Alcohol Retailing and/or Control, Ministry of Finance 5. Pilot testing and final scoring Blinded data Scoring reliability checks (data scored twice) 6. Calculating the final policy and weighted scores Percent of ideal score Weighted by effectiveness and scope
Control System Policy Scores Indicators: Type of retail system Alcohol sales channels Emphasis on social responsibility Ministry responsible for retail and control of alcohol Top ranking Middle ranking Bottom ranking Average score 9
Physical Availability Policy Scores Indicators: Regulations pertaining to outlet density Actual outlet density (on-premise and off-premise) Actual hours of operation Top ranking Middle ranking Bottom ranking Average score
Screening, Brief Intervention & Referral Policy Scores Indicators: • SBIR identified as priority in provincial strategy • Practice guidelines or position paper • Fee for service codes Top ranking Middle ranking Bottom ranking Average score
Provincial Alcohol Strategy Scores Indicators: • Focus of provincial strategy • Inclusion of components from WHO’s (2010) alcohol strategy Top ranking Middle ranking Bottom ranking Average score
Overall Results: Comparing the provinces on all 10 policy dimensions Top ranking provinces Middle ranking provinces Bottom ranking provinces Average score
Overall Results: Across all provinces • Top ranking provinces were ON, BC, NS. • An average national score of 47%. • Top 5 policy dimensions all fall below 60% of a perfect score -- i.e., price, control system, physical availability, drinking & driving, marketing and advertising. • A notable strength is Legal Drinking Age and enforcement. • Lowest scoring policy dimension is Warning Labels & Signs, which is also policy dimension with the lowest weighting. • The policies with the widest range of scores were SBIR and Provincial Alcohol Policy, respectively.
Recommendations & Knowledge Transfer Standardize inter-provincial documentation of policies with a safety and/or health perspective Enhance policy-relevant information exchange between jurisdictions Conduct social impact assessment of existing policies and pilot recommended policies Create mechanisms for inter-sector planning (e.g. between public health, liquor boards, finance and public safety sectors) Encourage provinces to strength areas with lowest scores
Recommendations & Knowledge Transfer Main report & 10 provincial summaries, with province-specific recommendations, have been widely distributed and generated media attention To date our findings have been used to inform: alcohol policy reviews in at least 5 provinces progress in a provincial alcohol strategy in 2 strengthened drinking and driving strategies in 2 strengthened alcohol pricing policies in 2 promote harm reduction policies on sponsorship in 1
Acknowledgements Funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research Receipt of data from the Provincial Liquor Boards as well as from the Provincial Ministries of Finance, Health and Ministries responsible for the control and sale of alcohol in each province. Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) Canada for permission to use materials collected for their 2012 Provincial and Territorial Review. Feedback on the selection of policy dimensions and scoring template by Thomas Greenfield, Esa Österberg and Robin Room. Francois Benoit, Denise De Pape and Robert Strang for their contributions to the project. Ann Dowsett Johnston for her input and guidance. The in-kind support provided by our co-investigators’ organizations is gratefully acknowledged.
Contact Information Norman Giesbrecht, Ph. D. Senior Scientist Emeritus Social & Epidemiological Research Dept. Centre for Addiction and Mental Health 33 Russell St. Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 2S1 Associate Professor, Dalla Lana School of Public Health Phone: (416) 535-8501 ext. 36895 email: norman.giesbrecht@camh.ca Link to the report on the CAMH website: http://www.camh.ca/en/research/news_and_publications/reports_and_books/Pages/default.aspx