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    The raising of minimum alcohol prices in Saskatchewan, Canada: Impacts on consumption and implications for public health

    Access Status
    Fulltext not available
    Authors
    Stockwell, Tim
    Zhao, J.
    Giesbrecht, N.
    Macdonald, S.
    Thomas, G.
    Wettlaufer, A.
    Date
    2012
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Stockwell, T. and Zhao, J. and Giesbrecht, N. and Macdonald, S. and Thomas, G. and Wettlaufer, A. 2012. The raising of minimum alcohol prices in Saskatchewan, Canada: Impacts on consumption and implications for public health. American Journal of Public Health. 102 (12): pp. e103-e110.
    Source Title
    American Journal of Public Health
    DOI
    10.2105/AJPH.2012.301094
    ISSN
    0090-0036
    School
    National Drug Research Institute (NDRI)
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/26833
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    Objectives: We report impacts on alcohol consumption following new and increased minimum alcohol prices in Saskatchewan, Canada. Methods: We conducted autoregressive integrated moving average time series analyses of alcohol sales and price data from the Saskatchewan government alcohol monopoly for 26 periods before and 26 periods after the intervention. Results: A 10% increase in minimum prices significantly reduced consumption of beer by 10.06%, spirits by 5.87%, wine by 4.58%, and all beverages combined by 8.43%. Consumption of coolers decreased significantly by 13.2%, cocktails by 21.3%, and liqueurs by 5.3%. There were larger effects for purely off-premise sales (e.g., liquor stores) than for primarily on-premise sales (e.g., bars, restaurants). Consumption of higher strength beer and wine declined the most. A 10% increase in minimum price was associated with a 22.0% decrease in consumption of higher strength beer (> 6.5% alcohol/volume) versus 8.17% for lower strength beers. The neighboring province of Alberta showed no change in per capita alcohol consumption before and after the intervention. Conclusions: Minimum pricing is a promising strategy for reducing the public health burden associated with hazardous alcohol consumption. Pricing to reflect percentage alcohol content of drinks can shift consumption toward lower alcohol content beverage types.

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      Introduction: Saskatchewan's introduction in April 2010 of minimum prices graded by alcohol strength led to an average minimum price increase of 9.1% per Canadian standard drink (=13.45g ethanol). This increase was shown ...
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      Aims: Minimum alcohol prices in British Columbia have been adjusted intermittently over the past 20 years. The present study estimates impacts of these adjustments on alcohol consumption. Design: Time–series and longitudinal ...
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      Background: Excessive alcohol consumption has significant adverse economic, social, and health outcomes. Recent estimates suggest that the annual economic costs of alcohol in Australia are up to AUD $36 billion. Policies ...
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