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Balancing Alcohol’s Traditional Cultural Role with Increasing Public Health Concerns. Ian M. Newman, PhD The Wesley C. Meierhenry Professor Director of Nebraska Prevention Center for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Department of Educational Psychology University of Nebraska-Lincoln (USA).
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Balancing Alcohol’s Traditional Cultural Role with Increasing Public Health Concerns
Ian M. Newman, PhD The Wesley C. Meierhenry Professor Director of Nebraska Prevention Center for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Department of Educational Psychology University of Nebraska-Lincoln (USA)
There is no doubt that beverage alcohol has the potential to contribute to significant problems for us as individuals, families, communities and countries. • There is also no doubt that customs involving alcohol use have played important roles in societies for centuries.
Review • Traditional, cultural roles of alcohol • Changes in public health approach to prevention • Balance between alcohol’s traditional role and preventing alcohol-related problems • Data from a community that reduced high-risk alcohol patterns
3 Fundamental Issues • Alcohol use is associated with pleasure • Policies must have wide public support • Education will be an integral part of any program
New (non-traditional) uses of alcohol, culturally unconstrained drunkenness to pass the time mood modification taste sociability food enhancement celebration hospitality medicine religious ceremony Traditional uses of alcohol, culturally constrained • HIGH RISK • LOW RISK
New Public Health • Can’t always eliminate the cause • Reduce risk • Reduce harm
Balancing Risks with Cultural Traditions High Risk Not a traditional use, few constraints Traditional use, culturally constrained Low Risk
Balancing Tradition with Risk:An Example • The Problem: How to reduce alcohol-related problems at a university Students line up to get into one of dozens of bars near university campus
Balancing Tradition with Risk:An Example • Community Coalition • Open, with wide involvement
Four Work Groups • Education and Information • Social Environment • Neighborhood relations • Policy and enforcement
Examples of objectives • Decrease the number of students younger than age 21 who reported drinking in bars from 21% to 16%. • Increase by 25% the number of students attending alcohol education programs. • Increase by 15% the number of alternative entertainment options available to students.
Results • Drinking & driving by university students
Results: • Students who do not drink alcohol experience alcohol-related problems
Lessons Learned • Know the problem (good epidemiology) • A logic model • Awareness • Policy change • Enforcement • Leadership • Consistency
Lessons Learned, continued • Inclusive • Publicity (example)
Lessons Learned, continued • Evaluation
Balancing Alcohol’s Traditional Cultural Role with Increasing Public Health Concerns
Two Options • Identify high-risk patterns of alcohol use and control them • Reduce overall per capita alcohol consumption
Two Options • Identify high-risk patterns of alcohol use and control them • Reduce overall per capita alcohol consumption
Plan • Goals • Objectives • Methods and strategies • Timetable • Who is responsible for each task