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Alcohol and Health Inequalities. Elizabeth Ambler Regional Alcohol Programme Manager Department of Health – East Midlands. Aims and Objectives. Alcohol Related Harm – What is the scale of the problem? Alcohol and Health Inequalities National and Regional Response to Alcohol Related Harm
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Alcohol and Health Inequalities Elizabeth Ambler Regional Alcohol Programme Manager Department of Health – East Midlands
Aims and Objectives Alcohol Related Harm – What is the scale of the problem? Alcohol and Health Inequalities National and Regional Response to Alcohol Related Harm Guided Group Work: Identification of effective mechanisms and interventions to address inequalities in alcohol related harm and treatment provision Feedback and Next Steps
Alcohol Related Harm – What is the Scale of the Problem? • The consequences of drinking go far beyond the individual drinkers health and well-being • They include harm to the unborn foetus, acts of drunken violence, vandalism, sexual assault and child abuse, and a huge health burden carried by both the NHS and friends and family who care for those damaged by alcohol
Alcohol Related Harm – What is the Scale of the Problem? • Since 1970, alcohol consumption has fallen in many European countries but has increased by 40% in England • The annual cost of alcohol-related crime and public disorder has been estimated at £7.3bn, the cost to employers has been put at £6.4bn Source CMO report 2008. Passive drinking: The collateral damage from alcohol
Alcohol Related Harm – What is the Scale of the Problem? • There are around 16, 000 premature deaths each year in England and Wales associated with alcohol misuse – double the number since the early nineties • Alcohol related hospital admissions are increasing at a rate of 70, 000 per year in England • In the East Midlands in 2008/9 there were 79,872 alcohol related hospital admissions (an increase of 5% from the previous year)
Alcohol Related Harm – What is the Scale of the Problem? • There are an estimated 1 in 13 people dependent on alcohol in the UK, with several million more drinking excessively to the extent where their health is at risk
Hospital Admissions in the East Midlands for Ethanol Poisoning
What are the Health Consequences of Alcohol? • Drinking regularly over the low risk guidelines can lead to serious health problems including: - Certain types of cancer - High blood pressure - Heart disease and stroke - Liver disease
Non-Health Consequences of Alcohol • 50-73% of assault victims injuries • Around 50% of all serious road crashes • Nearly 50% of domestic violence against females • 47% of serious injuries • 40% of self-poisoning Source: Alcohol Concern
Alcohol and the family • Approximately 1 million children live with a parent who is dependent on alcohol
Inequalities and Alcohol • Problem drinking is twice as common in the poorest as in the most affluent • Deaths from diseases caused by alcohol show a clear gradient with socioeconomic position, with an almost fourfold higher rate in unskilled working men compared to those from professional groups • Alcohol is a contributory factor to deaths from accidents, which also show a pronounced socioeconomic gradient
Inequalities and Alcohol • Poor women are more likely than the affluent to report being drunk • Higher levels of consumption of alcohol have been consistently observed in some deprived groups, such as unemployed people and those who are homeless • Problem drinking is associated with delinquency, criminality and violence, including domestic violence and child abuse
Inequalities and Alcohol • Heavy drinking in people in higher socioeconomic groups may be less harmful than in lower socioeconomic groups because they are protected from harmful effects by better diet, housing, health care and other factors • People with alcohol-related problems who are disadvantaged in other ways, through having limited financial or social resources or being homeless, may have less access to appropriate treatment services for all their needs, including treatment of their alcohol- related health problems Source: The Acheson Report 1998
Inequalities in Health Consequences • The most deprived fifth of the population suffer two to three times greater loss of life attributable to alcohol; three to five times greater mortality due to alcohol specific causes; and two to five times more admissions per hospital because of alcohol than the most affluent areas • On average men living in the more deprived areas lose 17 months of life and women lose 7 months of life due to conditions related to alcohol compared with 6 months for men and 3 months for women living in more affluent areas Source: Intellingence East Midlands Briefing: Alcohol and the East Midlands
Indices of Multiple Deprivation The seven domain indices are: • Income • Employment • Health Deprivation and Disability • Education, Skills and Training • Barriers to Housing and Services • Crime • Living Environment
National and Regional Response to Alcohol Related Harm Safe. Sensible. Social. The National Alcohol Strategy Priority actions: • Support for local partnerships and communities • Early identification interventions and treatment for drinking that could cause harm • Tackling alcohol related offending • Replacing glassware and bottles in high risk premises • Underage sales • Responsible retailing and promotions • Promoting a culture of sensible drinking • Support for harmful drinkers • Preventing harm to those under 18
National and Regional Response to Alcohol Related Harm The Alcohol Improvement Programme • The Alcohol Improvement Programme is commissioned by the Department of Health for 3 years from April 2008 • Focuses on 7 High Impact Changes (HIC) to coordinate delivery of Alcohol Harm Reduction
learning Support Influence Review Support Alcohol Interventions Improvement Centre Learning Centre Collects, co-ordinates and disseminates learning and good practice. Tools: SIPS toolkits, HuBCAPP, e-learning resource Enabling change Priority support to early implementor PCTs. Tools: Learning sets, collaboratives, etc NHS Planned delivery on ARHAs Start delivering ARHAs Receive priority support from AIP Implement high impact actions Implementation Early Implementor PCTs PCTs (Unplanned) delivery on targets through implementation of elements of the high impact actions learning learning Priority access learning NST(DH) Supports 18 challenged PCTs. Diagnosis, strategic reports & follow-up visits Regional co-ordinators (DH/SHA) Support local partnerships in delivery Support learning DH Policy Team Role: Work with outside bodies to facilitate frontline delivery. Develop policy, Develop Guidance, Commission, co-ordinate and contract manage support projects, channel expertise, NWPHO Provide local data on need and key evidence Trailblazers (SIPS), ANARP, MoCAM Effectiveness review, HES data,etc Evidence
National and Regional Response to Alcohol Related Harm The High Impact Changes • HIC 1 – Work in Partnership • HIC2 – Develop activities to control alcohol misuse • HIC 3 – Influence change through advocacy • HIC 4 – Improve the effectiveness and capacity of specialist treatment • HIC 5 – Appoint an alcohol worker • HIC 6 – IBA, provide more help to encourage people to drink less • HIC 7 – Amplify national social marketing priorities
National and Regional Response to Alcohol Related Harm The Alcohol Learning Centre • An on-line one-stop-shop which collates, co-ordinates and disseminates learning and promising practice from across the NHS and the Third Sector • It contains alcohol specific policy documents, guidance and tools and provides training resources to support frontline practitioners and commissioners
National and Regional Response to Alcohol Related Harm Regional Improvement Plan • Understanding need/challenge • Supporting networks • Partnership self assessment • Influence performance management • Amplify national campaigns • Social marketing/research • Supporting providers • Supporting commissioners
What is the Region Doing to Address Inequalities in Alcohol?
What is the Region Doing to Address Inequalities in Alcohol? Specific projects with offenders Specific work with BME/emerging communities groups Collaboration across all sectors
Guided Group Work Overarching theme: How can we work at regional level (DH and OneEM) to coordinate and up-weight approach to identify gaps in services and how to address them Topics/issues • BME/hard to reach groups • Children and young people • Social marketing campaigns • IBA integration into other settings • Workplace policies • Signposting to services