Introduction
In response to the 2011 United Nations declaration on non-communicable diseases (NCDs) ( United Nations General Assembly, 2011; United Nations, 2014), the World Health Organization proposed a target to reduce the harmful use of alcohol by 10% between the years 2010 and 2025 ( World Health Organization, 2014a), based on three possible indicators, adult per capita alcohol consumption, prevalence of heavy episodic drinking, and measures of alcohol-related morbidity and mortality ( World Health Organization, 2014b).
The bulk of alcohol-related severe health problems, including mortality, occurs in middle age ( Office for National Statistics, 2015), and, it is amongst this age group that policy and programme interventions are likely to bring the greatest health and productivity gains ( Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2015). Heavy drinkers are responsible for the majority all alcohol-related harm ( Rehm et al., 2013). It is also amongst this group, compared with lighter drinkers, that disproportionally greater health gains can be made for the same absolute reduction in alcohol consumption ( Rehm & Roerecke, 2013). Thus, if alcohol policy is to be most efficient in reducing the harmful use of alcohol, it should preferentially address adult drinkers, and, in particular, those who drink heavily.
Driving the NCD alcohol target are WHO’s Global Strategy to reduce the harmful use of alcohol ( World Health Organization, 2010), and WHO’s three ‘best buys’ ( World Economic Forum & World Health Organization, 2011; World Health Organization, 2013). One of the ten target areas within the global strategy is community action, with a specific call to: “strengthen capacity of local authorities to encourage and coordinate concerted community action by supporting and promoting the development of municipal policies to reduce harmful use of alcohol, as well as their capacity to enhance partnerships and networks of community institutions and nongovernmental Organizations” ( World Health Organization, 2010).
Cities are a potentially important setting and jurisdictional level for reducing NCDs ( De Leeuw et al., 2015; Farrington et al., 2015). There is a range of evidence-based interventions that fall within municipal jurisdictional responsibility and which could be implemented at city level to reduce the harmful use of alcohol ( Anderson & Baumberg, 2006; Anderson et al., 2009; Anderson et al., 2012; Burton et al., 2017; Fitzgerald et al., 2016; Martineau et al., 2013). Despite a long history of calls for city-based policies and action plans ( Mathrani & Anderson, 1998; Ritson, 1995; World Health Organization, 1998), and an equally long history of research endeavour ( Giesbrecht et al., 1990), a systematic review of the impact of alcohol policies, undertaken prior to the launch of the WHO global strategy, was unable to include community actions within its cost-effectiveness estimates, due to insufficient evidence of impact ( Anderson et al., 2009).
Spurred by a target of a global beer producer to reduce the harmful use of alcohol by 10% over the five-year period 2016–2020 in pilot cities in at least nine different middle- and high-income countries ( ABInBev, 2016), we have undertaken a review of reviews to investigate the potential impact of city-based action to reduce the harmful use of alcohol amongst adults. In our review, we have focused on reviews that summarize the literature of comprehensive community and municipal action, often based on a municipal comprehensive strategy and action plan, as put forward by the World Health Organization ( Anderson, 1991; Ritson, 1995). Because we anticipated very few such reviews, we have supplemented our findings with an overview of what could be implemented within a comprehensive municipal strategy to reduce the harmful use of alcohol, based on the published evidence base ( Anderson & Baumberg, 2006; Anderson et al., 2009; Anderson et al., 2012; Burton et al., 2017; Fitzgerald et al., 2016; Martineau et al., 2013).
Methods
During July 2017, we conducted a systematic literature search on OVID Medline, Healthstar, Embase, PsycINFO, AMED, Social Work Abstracts, CAB Abstracts, Mental Measurements Yearbook, Health and Psychosocial Instruments, International Pharmaceutical Abstracts, International Political Science Abstracts, NASW Clinical Register, and Epub Ahead of Print databases to identify reviews that addressed community and municipal alcohol interventions. With no language or date restrictions, the search used the following combination of terms: (“review” or “literature review” or “review literature” or “data pooling” or “comparative study” or “systematic review” or “meta-analysis” or “pooled analysis”), and “alcohol” and “intervention” and (“municipal” or “city” or “community”), supplemented with hand searches of included reviews.
Our inclusion criteria were reviews and overviews (whether or not systematic) that discussed the implementation of comprehensive policies and programmes to reduce the harmful use of alcohol amongst adults at the community or municipal level. We excluded reviews of specific alcohol policy interventions, for example restrictions on hours and days of sale, that may or may not have been part of a city action plan. Two authors (OSMH and PA) independently reviewed titles and abstracts for selecting papers for full text review and selecting papers to include. Discrepancies, which only related to whether or not the publication addressed comprehensive approaches, were resolved with discussion. The result of the search, analysed during July 2017, is summarized in Figure 1. As only five relevant reviews were identified, three of which were by the same author, we did not attempt to analyze them for their quality, but rather describe their methods and findings.
Figure 1.
Flow chart for search of reviews.
Results
Only five relevant reviews were identified ( Giesbrecht et al., 2014; Giesbrecht & Greenfield, 2003; Giesbrecht & Hayden, 2006; Gorman & Speer, 1996; Toomey & Lenk, 2001). Three included the same first author, and the most recent publication ( Giesbrecht et al., 2014) included all publications of, and reached similar conclusions to, the previous four reviews. None of the reviews were systematic and none adhered to standard guidelines. Subsequent to the publication dates of the reviews, our search identified one further large randomized study of the effectiveness of community action ( Shakeshaft et al., 2014).
Of the 23 individual studies mentioned in the 2014 review ( Giesbrecht et al., 2014), twelve included adults, mostly with a focus on younger adults. Six were from North America, two were from Nordic countries, and four were from Australia/New Zealand. Four of the 12 studies targeted bars, three media campaigns, two drink-driving, one overall access, one a specific location (a beach), and one primary health care-based brief advice programmes. No studies reported comprehensive community or municipal interventions. The four bar studies found an effect in reducing violence, which tapered off over time. The three media studies found no impact. The two drink-driving studies led to reduced alcohol-involved traffic crashes. The access and location study led to reductions in the harmful use of alcohol, but the brief advice initiative did not.
The large study, outside of the reviews, was a randomized trial comprising 20 communities in Australia that each had populations of 5,000–20,000 inhabitants ( Shakeshaft et al., 2014). Communities were pair-matched, and one member of each pair was randomly allocated to the experimental group. Thirteen interventions were implemented in the experimental communities from 2005 to 2009: community engagement; general practitioner training in alcohol screening and brief intervention (SBI); feedback to key stakeholders; media campaign; workplace policies/practices training; school-based intervention; general practitioner feedback on their prescribing of alcohol medications; community pharmacy-based SBI; web-based SBI; Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services support for SBI; Good Sports program for sports clubs; identifying and targeting high-risk weekends; and hospital emergency department–based SBI. The study failed to detect an impact of the interventions in reducing the harmful use of alcohol in routine data, but found a significant reduction of average alcohol use in surveys. Unfortunately, the study appeared under powered for the routine data, and had low response rates to measurement surveys. The community interventions were not able to be fully comprehensive and were not able to include a range of potentially impactful interventions, including sales taxes and restrictions on availability. Further, no process evaluation was reported; thus, whether or not the included interventions were implemented as planned, or the extent to which they were implemented is not reported.
One of the five reviews that we identified included a summary of feasible intervention options at the local and municipal level ( Giesbrecht & Haydon, 2006). We have included and expanded on these in Table 1, adding an overview of the evidence base ( Anderson & Baumberg, 2006; Anderson et al., 2009; Anderson et al., 2012; Burton et al., 2017; Fitzgerald et al., 2016; Martineau et al., 2013), with implementation illustrations at the city level. Dependent on jurisdictional responsibilities, city-level interventions that might have a meaningful contribution to reducing the harmful use of alcohol include sales taxes, restrictions on density of outlets and days and hours of sale, drink-drive restrictions, and scale-up of individual level advice and treatment programmes ( Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2015).
Table 1.
Feasible adult-oriented policies and programmes implementable at city level dependent on jurisdictional responsibilities, with evidence of impact and opportunity for city implementation.
| Policy measure | Evidence of impact | Opportunity for city implementation |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing policies | ||
| Alcohol taxes | Effective
| Many cities have opportunity to set alcohol
|
| Access policies | ||
| Outlet density | Effective
| Licensing of alcohol sales outlets allows local
|
| Days and hours of sale | Effective
| Licensing of alcohol sales outlets allows local
|
| Bar policies | ||
| Training of bar staff,
| Mixed effectiveness
| Drinking environments can be foci of alcohol-
|
| Advertising policies | ||
| Volume of advertising | Effective
| Cities have the opportunity of restricting
|
| Drink-drive restrictions | ||
| Sobriety checkpoints
| Effective
| Cities have the opportunity to step-up sobriety
|
| Designated driver
| Ineffective
| Whist a seemingly attractive approach, there
|
| Screening, advice and treatment | ||
| Digital interventions | Effective
| Off-the-shelf applications can be deployed at city
|
| Primary health care | Effective
| Tailored screening and brief advice programmes
|
| Workplace | Largely ineffective
| Although business cases are made for
|
| Secondary health care | Effective
| Treatment services can be embedded within
|
| Education and information | ||
| School-based
| Ineffective
| Whilst a popular intervention, and a necessary
|
| Public information
| Ineffective
| Media campaigns should focus on changing
|
| Changing social norms | Limited evidence
| Social norms campaigns should focus on
|
| Product reformulation | ||
| Alcohol content and
| Limited evidence
| Cities could set limits on beverage container
|
Discussion
Cities can be natural units for promoting health ( de Leeuw et al., 2015; Farrington et al., 2015), including reducing the harmful use of alcohol ( Mathrani & Anderson, 1998). Although not necessarily having the full jurisdictional responsibilities of national governments for all health policy issues, they often have greater flexibility and are an important site for innovative environmental measures that make healthier choices easier choices, shifting social norms in the process ( Reeve et al., 2015). Cities are members of many networks, including Healthy Cities networks, which are natural vehicles for deployment to full scale globally.
We have undertaken this review to investigate the potential impact of comprehensive city and municipal-based action to reduce the harmful use of alcohol amongst adults. We have addressed adults, rather than adolescents and young people for two reasons. The first reason is that, notwithstanding the neurotoxicity of alcohol to brain development, leading in adolescence to structural hippocampal changes ( Squeglia et al., 2014), the bulk of alcohol-related morbidity and mortality occurs in middle age ( Office for National Statistics, 2015). Actions that reduce the harmful use of alcohol amongst adults can lead to almost immediate reductions in health burden and risk of premature death, for injuries and alcohol use disorders, as well as for a number of chronic conditions, including cardiovascular diseases and liver cirrhosis ( Rehm et al., 2011; Rehm & Roerecke, 2013). For reductions in harmful use of alcohol in adolescents, however, were they sustained, they would take many years before they impact on middle-aged morbidity and mortality. In fact, there is no available evidence which demonstrates that reductions in adolescent harmful use of alcohol lead to reductions in adult alcohol-related morbidity and mortality ( McCambridge et al., 2011). The second reason for addressing adults is that there is a paucity of evaluated actions to reduce alcohol-related harm amongst adults at the community and municipal level, whereas this is not the case for actions addressing adolescents and young people (for example, see: Foxcroft & Tsertsvadze, 2011a; Foxcroft & Tsertsvadze, 2011b; Foxcroft & Tsertsvadze, 2011c; Hingson & White, 2014; Jones et al., 2007; Jones, 2014; Korczak et al., 2011; Newton et al., 2017; Spoth et al., 2008). A dissonance in research between adult oriented and youth-oriented actions to reduce the harmful use of alcohol (see Martineau et al., 2013) may reflect an undue focus of existing alcohol policy on youth-oriented actions ( Anderson et al., 2012; Madureira-Lima & Galea, 2018), despite their lack of evidence for impact ( Burton et al., 2017; Spoth et al., 2008). Implementation of what are described as politically palatable alcohol policies ( Nelson et al., 2014), such as those targeting youth, increased during the first decade of the 21st century at the expense of policies that would address adults in both the United States ( Nelson et al., 2014) and the European Union ( Anderson, 2013).
Our review has identified a suite of evidence-based policies and programmes that could, dependent on jurisdictional responsibilities, be implemented at the city level to reduce the harmful use of alcohol amongst adults. Indeed, some of the studies identified by the reviews that focused on one particular programme area, for example enforcement of bar regulations, stepped up drink-driving activities, and strengthened access regulations, found some impacts in reducing the harmful use of alcohol. However, only one study evaluated a suite of interventions, and found no convincing evidence of impact. This study, though, was unable to include a range of potential impactful interventions (price and availability), and did not report implementation fidelity of the included interventions Shakeshaft et al., 2012).
We have not been able to find evidence for the effective impact of comprehensive municipal action plans in reducing the harmful use of alcohol amongst adults. There is, thus, dissonance between calls for action and evidence. This contrasts with other topic areas, such as smoking ( Moreland-Russell et al., 2016; Perlman et al., 2016), obesity ( Reeve et al., 2015; Sisnowski et al., 2016), and physical activity ( Giles-Corti et al., 2016; Sallis et al., 2016a; Sallis et al., 2016b; Stevenson et al., 2016), where there is experience of coordinated city action and a supporting evidence base.
We conclude our paper by discussing how this dissonance might be reduced. First, there are needs for multi-city studies that test the impact of developed and implemented municipal action plans in reducing the harmful use of alcohol. To match the WHO target of a 10% reduction in the harmful use of alcohol over a 15-year time frame, recognizing the importance of addressing adults, and, in particular heavy drinkers, the evidence base indicates that municipal action plans need to include, where jurisdictional authority allows, all of: sales taxes to increase the price of alcohol; reductions in the availability of alcohol through restrictions on outlet density and days and hours of sale; intensive implementation of drink drive restrictions through sobriety checkpoints and/or unrestrictive (random) breath testing; and, widespread deployment and scale-up of health care based screening and brief advice and treatment programmes, see Table 1. Municipal action plans should not be based on public education or mass media programmes alone, as these have been found to be ineffective in reducing the harmful use of alcohol ( Martineau et al., 2013).
Ideally, multi-city studies should be set up as randomized trials with control cities in different sites with sufficient sample size with respect to both cities and individuals within cities to test whether the municipal action plans work. While this may be difficult to realize, given that such randomized trials would have very high costs, and there are not many examples of sufficiently powered community trials in the literature, a different design in combining national aggregate and individual level data could be used to achieve better control ( Gmel et al., 2004). Longitudinal individual level data could be collected by drawing representative samples from the adult population in the cities, with an oversampling of heavier drinkers. This would allow an analysis of how the city actions affect individual drinking trajectories, as recommended by a number of authors ( Fitterer et al., 2015; Holmes et al., 2015). The evaluation should triangulate the individual cohort data with the aggregate-level data, and with other routinely collected data, such as alcohol-attributable hospitalizations ( Shakeshaft et al., 2014) to test if the municipal actions lead to a reduction in the harmful use of alcohol. Wastewater-based epidemiology can be used to contrast alcohol consumption between implementation cities and comparator cities ( Ryu et al., 2016). Logic models should be developed to undertake process evaluation ( Moore et al., 2015) to ascertain implementation fidelity and to identify and empirically demonstrate effective best practices to reduce harmful consumption of alcohol that could be adopted for scale-up in other cities and countries ( Barker et al., 2016).
Data availability
The data referenced by this article are under copyright with the following copyright statement: Copyright: © 2018 Anderson P et al.
Data associated with the article are available under the terms of the Creative Commons Zero "No rights reserved" data waiver (CC0 1.0 Public domain dedication).
All data underlying the results are available as part of the article and no additional source data are required.
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Abstract
Background: The World Health Organization global strategy on alcohol called for municipal policies to reduce the harmful use of alcohol. Yet, there is limited evidence that documents the impact of city-level alcohol policies.
Methods: Review of reviews for all years to July 2017. Searches on OVID Medline, Healthstar, Embase, PsycINFO, AMED, Social Work Abstracts, CAB Abstracts, Mental Measurements Yearbook, Health and Psychosocial Instruments, International Pharmaceutical Abstracts, International Political Science Abstracts, NASW Clinical Register, and Epub Ahead of Print databases. All reviews that address adults, without language or date restrictions resulting from combining the terms (“review” or “literature review” or “review literature” or “data pooling” or “comparative study” or “systematic review” or “meta-analysis” or “pooled analysis”), and “alcohol”, and “intervention” and (“municipal” or “city” or “community”).
Results: Five relevant reviews were identified. Studies in the reviews were all from high income countries and focussed on the acute consequences of drinking, usually with one target intervention, commonly bars, media, or drink-driving. No studies in the reviews reported the impact of comprehensive city-based action. One community cluster randomized controlled trial in Australia, published after the reviews, failed to find convincing evidence of an impact of community-based interventions in reducing adult harmful use of alcohol.
Conclusions: To date, with one exception, the impact of adult-oriented comprehensive community and municipal action to reduce the harmful use of alcohol has not been studied. The one exception failed to find a convincing effect. We conclude with recommendations for closing this evidence gap.
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