英格兰西北部和东北部地方当局最低单位定价对酒精危害的潜在影响:一项模型研究

A. Brennan, C. Angus, R. Pryce, Penny Buykx, Madeleine Henney, D. Gillespie, J. Holmes, P. Meier
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引用次数: 4

摘要

2018年,苏格兰对酒类实行了每单位50便士的最低单价。先前的模型估计了最低单价对英格兰、苏格兰、威尔士和北爱尔兰的影响。决策者想知道最低单位定价对英国地方政府的潜在影响;本研究的前提是最低单位定价的估计效果会因地而异。目的是估计在英格兰地方当局一级实施酒精最低单位定价对死亡率、住院率和犯罪率的潜在影响。这是一个证据综合,并使用谢菲尔德酒精政策模型(地方当局版本4.0)的计算机建模。这项研究从英国健康调查中收集了当地酒精消费的证据,从生活成本和食品调查中收集了当地价格的数据,并从市场研究公司的实际销售数据中收集了数据。根据《国际疾病和相关健康问题统计分类第十版》所定义的45种疾病,这些数据与当地危害有关,包括酒精导致的死亡率(来自国家统计局)和酒精导致的住院率(来自医院事件统计)。这些数据是根据多重剥夺指数五分位数划分的八个年龄-性别组进行的。还分析了与酒精有关的犯罪数据(国家统计局警察记录的犯罪和未记录犯罪的上升)。本研究设置在英格兰西北部的23个上层地方当局,东北部地区的12个上层地方当局和9个政府办公区,并进行了全国性的总结。研究对象为年龄≥18岁的英格兰人口。干预措施是设定当地最低单价。基准情况是每单位酒精50便士。采用每单位酒精最低单价30p、40p、60p和70p进行敏感性分析。主要结果测量是酒精导致的死亡、住院和犯罪的变化。还审查了国民保健服务费用的节省、酒精购买和消费的变化、贸易外和贸易内零售商收入的变化以及最贫困地区和最不贫困地区之间不平等的斜率指数的变化。该模型在上层地方政府层面已被证明是可行的。由此产生的估计表明,在地方当局一级对酒精实行最低单位定价可以有效地减少酒精导致的死亡、住院、国民保健服务费用和犯罪。据估计,在地方当局一级,酒精最低单价为50便士,将使西北地区每年与酒精有关的死亡人数减少205人,住院人数减少5956人(-5.5%),犯罪人数减少8528人(-2.5%)。这些估计的减少主要是由于5%的人饮酒处于高风险水平(例如,男性每周喝25品脱啤酒或5瓶葡萄酒,女性每周喝17品脱啤酒或3.5瓶葡萄酒,目前每年在酒精上的花费约为2500英镑)。对西北和东北地区影响的模型估计比全国范围更大,因为目前这些地区消费的廉价酒精更多,而且这些地区与酒精有关的死亡和住院人数更多。最低单价为30p的估计效果比最低单价为50p的估计效果低约90%,最低单价为40p的估计效果低约50%。据估计,在贫困地区,健康不平等现象减少,健康收益更大,因为那里购买的廉价酒精更多,基线危害也更高。这种方法需要综合来自多个来源的关于酒精消费的证据;价格;疾病发病率,死亡率和犯罪率。所使用的价格弹性来自英国以前对价格响应性的分析,而不是特定于当地地区。这项研究没有估计“跨境效应”,即前往该地区以外的商店购物。模型估计表明,地方当局一级的最低酒精单位定价将是一项有效和目标明确的政策,可以减少不平等现象。可以进一步利用谢菲尔德地方当局酒精政策模型框架来审查国家政策(例如税收变化)或地方政策(例如许可或鉴定和简要咨询)对地方的影响。随着苏格兰最低单价实施的证据出现,这将进一步为英格兰地方的影响估计提供信息。用于估计每个地方当局的饮酒和购买模式的方法也可用于涉及影响公共健康的不健康产品的其他专题,例如,估计当地吸烟或高脂肪、高盐食品的消费模式。 该项目由国家卫生研究所(NIHR)公共卫生研究方案资助,将全文发表在《公共卫生研究》上;第9卷,第4号请参阅NIHR期刊图书馆网站了解更多项目信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Potential effects of minimum unit pricing at local authority level on alcohol-attributed harms in North West and North East England: a modelling study
In 2018, Scotland implemented a 50p-per-unit minimum unit price for alcohol. Previous modelling estimated the impact of minimum unit pricing for England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Decision-makers want to know the potential effects of minimum unit pricing for local authorities in England; the premise of this study is that estimated effects of minimum unit pricing would vary by locality. The objective was to estimate the potential effects on mortality, hospitalisations and crime of the implementation of minimum unit pricing for alcohol at local authority level in England. This was an evidence synthesis, and used computer modelling using the Sheffield Alcohol Policy Model (local authority version 4.0). This study gathered evidence on local consumption of alcohol from the Health Survey for England, and gathered data on local prices paid from the Living Costs and Food Survey and from market research companies’ actual sales data. These data were linked with local harms in terms of both alcohol-attributable mortality (from the Office for National Statistics) and alcohol-attributable hospitalisations (from Hospital Episode Statistics) for 45 conditions defined by the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision. These data were examined for eight age–sex groups split by five Index of Multiple Deprivation quintiles. Alcohol-attributable crime data (Office for National Statistics police-recorded crimes and uplifts for unrecorded offences) were also analysed. This study was set in 23 upper-tier local authorities in North West England, 12 upper-tier local authorities in the North East region and nine government office regions, and a national summary was conducted. The participants were the population of England aged ≥ 18 years. The intervention was setting a local minimum unit price. The base case is 50p per unit of alcohol. Sensitivity analyses were undertaken using minimum unit prices of 30p, 40p, 60p and 70p per unit of alcohol. The main outcome measures were changes in alcohol-attributable deaths, hospitalisations and crime. Savings in NHS costs, changes in alcohol purchasing and consumption, changes in revenue to off-trade and on-trade retailers and changes in the slope index of inequality between most and least deprived areas were also examined. The modelling has proved feasible at the upper-tier local authority level. The resulting estimates suggest that minimum unit pricing for alcohol at local authority level could be effective in reducing alcohol-attributable deaths, hospitalisations, NHS costs and crime. A 50p minimum unit price for alcohol at local authority level is estimated to reduce annual alcohol-related deaths in the North West region by 205, hospitalisations by 5956 (–5.5%) and crimes by 8528 (–2.5%). These estimated reductions are mostly due to the 5% of people drinking at high-risk levels (e.g. men drinking > 25 pints of beer or five bottles of wine per week, women drinking > 17 pints of beer or 3.5 bottles of wine per week, and who spend around £2500 per year currently on alcohol). Model estimates of impact are bigger in the North West and North East regions than nationally because, currently, more cheap alcohol is consumed in these regions and because there are more alcohol-related deaths and hospitalisations in these areas. A 30p minimum unit price has estimated effects that are ≈ 90% lower than those of a 50p minimum unit price, and a 40p minimum unit price has estimated effects that are ≈ 50% lower. Health inequalities are estimated to reduce with greater health gains in the deprived areas, where more cheap alcohol is purchased and where there are higher baseline harms. The approach requires synthesis of evidence from multiple sources on alcohol consumption; prices paid; and incidence of diseases, mortality and crime. Price elasticities used are from previous UK analysis of price responsiveness rather than specific to local areas. The study has not estimated ‘cross-border effects’, namely travelling to shops outside the region. The modelling estimates suggest that minimum unit pricing for alcohol at local authority level would be an effective and well-targeted policy, reducing inequalities. The Sheffield Alcohol Policy Model for Local Authorities framework could be further utilised to examine the local impact of national policies (e.g. tax changes) or local policies (e.g. licensing or identification and brief advice). As evidence emerges from the Scottish minimum unit price implementation, this will further inform estimates of impact in English localities. The methods used to estimate drinking and purchasing patterns in each local authority could also be used for other topics involving unhealthy products affecting public health, for example to estimate local smoking or high-fat, high-salt food consumption patterns. This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme and will be published in full in Public Health Research; Vol. 9, No. 4. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
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