27 results
Search Results
2. A national strategy for smoking cessation treatment in England.
- Author
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McNeill, Ann, Raw, Martin, Whybrow, Janet, and Bailey, Patsy
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SMOKING cessation ,SMOKING ,CIGARETTE smokers ,PEOPLE with addiction ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
In 1998 the UK government published a White Paper on tobacco which set out the development of smoking cessation treatment services across England. This paper presents a detailed analysis of the events leading up to the inclusion of smoking cessation treatment services within the White Paper, and the background to the evaluation of those services, the results of which are the subject of the remaining papers in this supplement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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3. History and its contribution to understanding addiction and society.
- Author
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Berridge, Virginia
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DRUG abuse ,DRUG abuse policy ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,HEALTH policy ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,HISTORY of research ,PRACTICAL politics ,GOVERNMENT policy ,BOOKS ,HISTORY - Abstract
This paper provides a personal memoir of historical work at the Addiction Research Unit, in particular the genesis of the book Opium and the People. This topic had policy significance for US drug policy and a competing US study was funded. The development of the substance use history field is surveyed, and its expansion in recent times through a focused professional association and a critical mass of researchers in the area, covering a wide range of topics. The politics of using history in this area can be problematic. History now sits at the policy table more easily, but there is still a tendency for professionals in the field to use (and misuse) it, rather than calling on the interpretive and challenging approach they would obtain from professional historians. The paper calls for historians and others to move beyond a substance specific focus and to avoid the tendency for 'naive history' implicit in using only digitized industry archives as the sole source. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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4. Griffith Edwards, the Addiction Research Unit and research on the criminal justice system.
- Author
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Farrell, Michael, Marsden, John, and Strang, John
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ADDICTIONS ,CRIMINAL justice system ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,ALCOHOLISM treatment ,HIV infection risk factors ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,RESEARCH ,ALCOHOLISM ,PEOPLE with alcoholism ,COMMUNITY health services ,CONTINUUM of care ,CRIMINOLOGY ,HEALTH facilities ,HOMELESS persons ,PRISONERS ,GOVERNMENT policy ,LEADERS ,RESEARCH personnel ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
Background This paper reviews the early work of Griffith Edwards and his colleagues on alcohol in the criminal justice system and outlines the direction of research in this area in the Addiction Research Unit in the 1960s and 1970s. The paper outlines the link between that work and work undertaken in the more recent past in this area. Methods The key papers of the authors are reviewed and the impact of this work on policy and practice is discussed. Conclusions There is a rich seam of work on deprived and incarcerated populations that has been under way at the Addiction Research Unit and subsequently the National Addiction Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, London. Griffith Edwards initiated this work that explores the risks and problems experienced by people moving between the health and criminal justice system, and demonstrated the need for better care and continuity across this system [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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5. Policy congruence and advocacy strategies in the discourse networks of minimum unit pricing for alcohol and the soft drinks industry levy.
- Author
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Hilton, Shona, Buckton, Christina H., Henrichsen, Tim, Fergie, Gillian, and Leifeld, Philip
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UNIT pricing ,ALCOHOLIC beverage sales & prices ,SOFT drink industry ,HEALTH policy ,SOFT drinks ,DISCOURSE analysis ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MANUFACTURING industries & economics ,ALCOHOLIC beverages ,BEVERAGES ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,PUBLIC health ,SOCIAL networks ,CONSUMER activism - Abstract
Background and Aim: Public health policy development is subject to a range of stakeholders presenting their arguments to influence opinion on the best options for policy action. This paper compares stakeholders' positions in the discourse networks of two pricing policy debates in the United Kingdom: minimum unit pricing for alcohol (MUP) and the soft drinks industry levy (SDIL). Design Discourse analysis was combined with network visualization to create representations of stakeholders' positions across the two policy debates as they were represented in 11 national UK newspapers. Setting: United Kingdom. Observations: For the MUP debate 1924 statements by 152 people from 87 organizations were coded from 348 articles. For the SDIL debate 3883 statements by 214 people from 175 organizations were coded from 511 articles. Measurements Network analysis techniques were used to identify robust argumentative similarities and maximize the identification of network structures. Network measures of size, connectedness and cohesion were used to compare discourse networks. Findings The networks for both pricing debates involve a similar range of stakeholder types and form clusters representing policy discourse coalitions. The SDIL network is larger than the MUP network, particularly the proponents' cluster, with more than three times as many stakeholders. Both networks have tight clusters of manufacturers, think‐tanks and commercial analysts in the opponents' coalition. Public health stakeholders appear in both networks, but no health charity or advocacy group is common to both. Conclusion: A comparison of the discourse in the UK press during the policy development processes for minimum unit pricing for alcohol and the soft drinks industry levy suggests greater cross‐sector collaboration among policy opponents than proponents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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6. Alcohol marketing regulation: from research to public policy.
- Author
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Monteiro, Maristela G., Babor, Thomas F., Jernigan, David, and Brookes, Chris
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ALCOHOLIC beverages ,MARKETING laws ,LIQUOR laws ,MARKETING ,HISTORY ,PREVENTION of alcoholism ,DRINKING behavior ,INDUSTRIES ,PUBLIC health administration ,SELF-management (Psychology) ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the authors discuss various reports within the journal on topics including the regulation of alcoholic beverage marketing, the evolution of international marketing laws as of 2017, and the history of alcohol-related laws.
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- 2017
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7. Getting to grips with the cannabis problem: the evolving contributions and impact of Griffith Edwards.
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Hall, Wayne
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DRUG control ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,TWENTIETH century ,HISTORY ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH policy ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,LEADERS ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
Griffith Edwards played an important role in cannabis policy debates within government advisory committees in the United Kingdom from the early 1970s until the early 1980s. This has largely been hidden from public knowledge by the confidentiality of these committee discussions. The purpose of this paper is to use Griffith's writings and the results of recent historical scholarship to outline the views he expressed, the reasons he gave for them, and to provide a brief assessment of his contribution to the development of British cannabis policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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8. Regulation of nicotine replacement therapies (NRT): a critique of current practice.
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McNeill, Ann, Foulds, Jonathan, and Bates, Clive
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SMOKING ,NICOTINE ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) describes a group of products delivering nicotine that are licensed for the relief of withdrawal as an aid to smoking cessation. This paper examines areas where public health considerations suggest changes should be made to the current indications and characteristics for NRT products. It is argued that the current regulatory framework restricts access to NRT without adequately considering that the likely consequence is continued dependent use of a far more harmful and widely available version of the same drug: tobacco. The paper argues that minors, pregnant smokers and smokers with cardiovascular disease (CVD) be allowed to use NRT. NRT use for smoking reduction, to support temporary abstinence, for long-term use should also be enabled and NRT products should be made as widely available as cigarettes. This paper also recommends that regulators encourage the development of less harmful forms of nicotine delivery devices to compete with cigarettes. Although this paper is written largely with reference to the UK medicines regulatory framework, these issues also apply to many other countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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9. 'Maybe they should regulate themquite strictly until they know the true dangers': a focus group study exploring UK adolescents' views on e-cigarette regulation.
- Author
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Weishaar, Heide, Trevisan, Filippo, and Hilton, Shona
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TEENAGERS ,TOBACCO use ,TEENAGER attitudes ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,ELECTRONIC cigarettes ,MARKETING ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SMOKING laws ,CONSUMER attitudes ,DOCUMENTATION ,FOCUS groups ,SAFETY ,SALES personnel ,QUALITATIVE research ,RULES ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,FIELD notes (Science) - Abstract
Background and aims Regulation of electronic cigarettes has moved to the top of the addiction policy agenda, as demonstrated by the recent focus across the United Kingdom on introducing age-of-sale restrictions. However, the views of those affected by such regulation remain largely unexplored. This paper presents the first detailed qualitative exploration of adolescents' perceptions of existing, and opinions about potential e-cigarette regulation. Methods Sixteen focus groups, including a total of 83 teenagers between the ages of 14 and 17 years, were conducted in deprived, mixed and affluent urban areas in Scotland and England between November 2014 and February 2015. Transcripts were imported into Nivivo 10, coded thematically and analysed. Results Participants critically considered existing evidence and competing interests in regulatory debates and demonstrated sophisticated understanding of the advantages and disadvantages of regulation. They overwhelmingly supported strong e-cigarette regulation and endorsed restrictions on sales to minors, marketing and e-cigarette use in public places. Concern about potential health harms of e-cigarette use and marketing increasing the acceptability of vaping and smoking led these adolescents to support regulation. Conclusions In focus group discussions, a sample of UK adolescents exposed to particular communications about e-cigarettes supported strict regulation of e-cigarettes, including banning sales to minors and use in indoor public areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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10. The National Treatment Outcomes Research Study (NTORS) and its influence on addiction treatment policy in the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Gossop, Michael
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DRUG abuse treatment ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DRUGS & crime ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,METHADONE treatment programs ,HEALTH policy ,ALCOHOLISM ,CRIME ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,TREATMENT programs ,DRUG abusers ,RESIDENTIAL care ,DISEASE complications ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper describes the political origins of the National Treatment Outcomes Research Study (NTORS) and the outputs and impacts of the study. NTORS was designed to meet the request of the Health Secretary and of a Government Task Force for evidence about the effectiveness of the national addiction treatment services. NTORS was a prospective cohort study which investigated outcomes over a 5-year period of drug users admitted to four major treatment modalities: in-patient treatment, residential rehabilitation, methadone reduction and methadone maintenance programmes. The study investigated treatments delivered under day-to-day operating conditions. Outcomes showed substantial reductions in illicit drug use and reduced injecting risk behaviours. These changes were accompanied by improved psychological and physical health and by reductions in criminal behaviour. However, not all outcomes were so positive. There was a continuing mortality rate in the cohort of about 1% per year, and many clients continued to drink heavily throughout the 5-year follow-up. NTORS findings informed and influenced UK addiction treatment policy both at the time and subsequently. The findings were influential in supporting an immediate increase in funding for treatment, and Government Ministers have repeatedly cited NTORS as evidence of the effectiveness of addiction treatment. One finding that received political attention was that of the cost savings provided by treatment through reductions in crime. This important finding led to an unanticipated consequence of NTORS; namely, the greater focus on crime reduction that has increasingly been promoted as a political and social priority for drug misuse treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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11. Toward a public health approach to the protection of vulnerable populations from the harmful effects of alcohol marketing.
- Author
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Babor, Thomas F., Jernigan, David, Brookes, Chris, and Brown, Katherine
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ALCOHOLIC beverages ,PUBLIC health ,CONVENTION on the Rights of the Child ,MARKETING ,LIQUOR laws ,MARKETING laws ,ALCOHOL drinking prevention ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ADOLESCENCE ,CHILDREN - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the authors discuss various reports within the issue on topics including the regulation of alcohol marketing to protect human rights, public safety, and public health, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, and Latin American marketing codes.
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- 2017
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12. Commentary on Ally et al. (2016): Can alcohol market segmentation provide a basis for alcohol policy?
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J. M., Najman
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ALCOHOL ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CULTURE ,DRINKING behavior ,ALCOHOL drinking - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented in response to the article "Developing a Social Practice-Based Typology of British Drinking Culture in 2009-2011: Implications for Alcohol Policy Analyses" by A.K. Ally, M. Lovatt, P.S. Meier, A. Brennan, and J. Holmes in volume 111 of f the periodical.
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- 2016
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13. News and Notes.
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CANNABIS (Genus) ,SMOKING laws ,SMOKELESS tobacco ,CACAO ,ALCOHOL drinking ,HUMAN rights ,MARKETING ,OCCUPATIONAL achievement ,PRACTICAL politics ,PUNISHMENT ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DRUG control ,LAW - Abstract
The article offers news briefs related to drug and alcohol addiction. A report titled "Inflicting Harm; Judicial corporal punishment for drugs and alcohol in selected countries" has been published by Harm Reduction International to allow corporal punishment for alcohol and drug-related offenses. Applications for the Young Scholars Award of the International Society of Addiction Journal Editors (ISAJE) in 2012. BBC News reports on the termination of Ricardo Soberon, a drug tsar from Peru.
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- 2012
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14. Cost‐effectiveness of personal tailored risk information and taster sessions to increase the uptake of the NHS stop smoking services: the Start2quit randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Wu, Qi, Gilbert, Hazel, Nazareth, Irwin, Sutton, Stephen, Morris, Richard, Petersen, Irene, Galton, Simon, and Parrott, Steve
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SMOKING cessation ,COST effectiveness ,CIGARETTE smokers ,ANTI-smoking campaigns ,PUBLIC health ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HUMAN services ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DECISION making ,FAMILY medicine ,MEDICAL care costs ,NATIONAL health services ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SOCIAL services ,PATIENT participation ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Abstract: Aims: To assess the cost‐effectiveness of a two‐component intervention designed to increase attendance at the NHS Stop Smoking Services (SSSs) in England. Design: Cost‐effectiveness analysis alongside a randomized controlled trial (Start2quit). Setting: NHS SSS and general practices in England. Participants: The study comprised 4384 smokers aged 16 years or more identified from medical records in 99 participating practices, who were motivated to quit and had not attended the SSS in the previous 12 months. Intervention and comparator: Intervention was a personalized and tailored letter sent from the general practitioner (GP) and a personal invitation and appointment to attend a taster session providing information about SSS. Control was a standard generic letter from the GP advertising SSS and asking smokers to contact the service to make an appointment. Measurements: Costs measured from an NHS/personal social services perspective, estimated health gains in quality‐adjusted life‐years (QALYs) measured with EQ‐5D and incremental cost per QALY gained during both 6 months and a life‐time horizon. Findings: During the trial period, the adjusted mean difference in costs was £92 [95% confidence interval (CI) = –£32 to –£216) and the adjusted mean difference in QALY gains was 0.002 (95% CI = –0.001 to 0.004). This generates an incremental cost per QALY gained of £59 401. The probability that the tailored letter and taster session is more cost‐effective than the generic letter at 6 months is never above 50%. In contrast, the discounted life‐time health‐care cost was lower in the intervention group, while the life‐time QALY gains were significantly higher. The probability that the intervention is more cost‐effective is more than 83% using a £20 000–30 000 per QALY‐gained decision‐making threshold. Conclusions: An intervention designed to increase attendance at the NHS Stop Smoking Services (tailored letter and taster session in the services) appears less likely to be cost‐effective than a generic letter in the short term, but is likely to become more cost‐effective than the generic letter during the long term. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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15. Does paying service providers by results improve recovery outcomes for drug misusers in treatment in England?
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Jones, Andrew, Pierce, Matthias, Sutton, Matt, Mason, Thomas, and Millar, Tim
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TREATMENT programs ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,HEALTH policy ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,TREATMENT duration ,VALUE-based healthcare ,ECONOMICS ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CRIME ,DISEASE complications ,HOUSING ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,TIME ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DRUG abusers ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Abstract: Aim: To compare drug recovery outcomes in commissioning areas included in a ‘payment by results’ scheme with all other areas. Design: Observational and data linkage study of the National Drug Treatment Monitoring System, Office for National Statistics mortality database and Police National Computer criminal records, for 2 years before and after introduction of the scheme. Pre–post controlled comparison compared outcomes in participating versus non‐participating areas following adjustment for drug use, functioning and drug treatment status. Setting: Drug services in England providing publicly funded, structured treatment. Participants: Adults in treatment (between 2010 and 2014): 154 175 (10 716 in participating areas, 143 459 non‐participating) treatment journeys in the 2 years before and 148 941 (10 012 participating, 138 929 non‐participating) after the introduction of the scheme. Intervention: Scheme participation, with payment to treatment providers based on patient outcomes versus all other areas. Measurements: Rate of treatment initiation; waiting time (> or < 3 weeks); treatment completion; and re‐presentation; substance use; injecting; housing status; fatal overdose; and acquisitive crime. Findings: In participating areas, there were relative decreases in rates of: treatment initiation [difference‐in‐differences odds ratio (DID OR) = 0.17, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.14, 0.21]; treatment completion (DID OR = 0.60, 95% CI = 0.53, 0.67); and treatment completion without re‐presentation (DID OR = 0.63, 95% CI = 0.52, 0.77) compared with non‐participating areas. Within treatment, relative abstinence (DID OR = 1.50, 95% CI = 1.30, 1.72) and non‐injecting (DID OR = 1.32, 95% CI = 1.10, 1.59) rates were improved in participating areas. No significant changes in mortality, recorded crime or housing status were associated with the scheme. Conclusion: Drug addiction recovery services in England that are commissioned on a payment‐by‐results basis tend to have lower rates of treatment initiation and completion but higher rates of in‐treatment abstinence and non‐injecting than other services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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16. Where is the evidence?
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McCambridge, Jim, Kypri, Kypros, Miller, Peter, Hawkins, Ben, and Hastings, Gerard
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INDUSTRIES ,ALCOHOLIC beverages ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
A response from the authors of the article "Be aware of Drinkaware" which was published in a previous issue is presented.
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- 2015
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17. Widening the debate on the drug policy ratchet: response to commentaries.
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Measham, Fiona and Stevens, Alex
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SUBSTANCE abuse laws ,HALLUCINOGENIC drugs ,HEALTH policy ,PRACTICAL politics ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DRUG laws - Abstract
A response from the author of the article "Widening the Debate on the Drug Policy Ratchet" in the previous issue is presented.
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- 2014
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18. Developing a social practice-based typology of British drinking culture in 2009-2011: implications for alcohol policy analysis.
- Author
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Ally, Abdallah K., Lovatt, Melanie, Meier, Petra S., Brennan, Alan, and Holmes, John
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ALCOHOL drinking & society ,BRITISH social life & customs, 1945- ,ALCOHOL ,PUBLIC health ,POLICY analysis ,SOCIAL types ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ALCOHOL drinking ,ALCOHOLIC beverages ,CULTURE ,DRINKING behavior ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL context ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,CROSS-sectional method ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,DIARY (Literary form) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background and aims The concept of national drinking culture is well established in research and policy debate, but rarely features in contemporary alcohol policy analysis. We aim to demonstrate the value of the alternative concept of social practices for quantitatively operationalizing drinking culture. We discuss how a practice perspective addresses limitations in existing analytical approaches to health-related behaviour before demonstrating its empirical application by constructing a statistical typology of British drinking occasions. Design Cross-sectional latent class analysis of drinking occasions derived from retrospective 1-week drinking diaries obtained from quota samples of a market research panel. Occasions are periods of drinking with no more than 2 hours between drinks. Setting Great Britain, 2009-11. Cases A total of 187 878 occasions nested within 60 215 nationally representative adults (aged 18 + years). Measurements Beverage type and quantity per occasion; location, company and gender composition of company; motivation and reason for occasion; day, start-time and duration of occasion; and age, sex and social grade. Findings Eight occasion types are derived based primarily on parsimony considerations rather than model fit statistics. These are mixed location heavy drinking (10.4% of occasions), heavy drinking at home with a partner (9.4%), going out with friends (11.1%), get-together at someone's house (14.4%), going out for a meal (8.6%), drinking at home alone (13.6%), light drinking at home with family (12.8%) and light drinking at home with a partner (19.6%). Conclusions An empirical model of drinking culture, comprising a typology of drinking practices, reveals the dominance of moderate drinking practices in Great Britain. The model demonstrates the potential for a practice perspective to be used in evaluation of how and why drinking cultures change in response to public health interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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19. News and Notes.
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DRUGS ,PHARMACEUTICAL industry ,TOBACCO products ,TOBACCO package labels ,ELECTRONIC cigarettes ,DRUG abuse ,GOVERNMENT policy ,TOBACCO laws ,HEROIN ,PSYCHIATRIC drug laws ,SUBSTANCE abuse prevention ,AWARDS ,BUPRENORPHINE ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,DRUG infusion pumps ,HEALTH facilities ,INJECTIONS ,INVESTMENTS ,LABELS ,PRESS ,WORLD Wide Web ,INFORMATION resources ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
The article presents drug and pharmaceutical industry news briefs as of August 2016. Great Britain has introduced uniform packaging regulations for tobacco products. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has released regulations on vaping products and electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes). The European Monitoring Centre on Drugs and Drug Abuse (EMCDDA) released its "European Drug Report" which found a rise in ectasy and synthetic cannabis use in European Union member states.
- Published
- 2016
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20. Health information on alcoholic beverage containers: has the alcohol industry's pledge in England to improve labelling been met?
- Author
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Petticrew, Mark, Douglas, Nick, Knai, Cécile, Durand, Mary Alison, Eastmure, Elizabeth, and Mays, Nicholas
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ALCOHOLIC beverage labeling ,WARNING labels ,ALCOHOL industry ,ALCOHOL drinking ,PUBLIC health ,ALCOHOL use in pregnancy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PREVENTION ,ALCOHOLIC beverages ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FETAL abnormalities ,HEALTH ,INDUSTRIES ,LABELS ,MARKETING ,RESEARCH funding ,INFORMATION resources - Abstract
Aims In the United Kingdom, alcohol warning labels are the subject of a voluntary agreement between industry and government. In 2011, as part of the Public Health Responsibility Deal in England, the industry pledged to ensure that 80% of products would have clear, legible health warning labelling, although an analysis commissioned by Portman found that only 57.1% met best practice. We assessed what proportion of alcohol products now contain the required health warning information, and its clarity and placement. Design Survey of alcohol labelling data. Setting United Kingdom. Participants Analysis of the United Kingdom's 100 top-selling alcohol brands ( n = 156 individual products). Measurements We assessed the product labels in relation to the presence of five labelling elements: information on alcohol units, government consumption guidelines, pregnancy warnings, reference to the Drinkaware website and a responsibility statement. We also assessed the size, colour and placement of text, and the size and colouring of the pregnancy warning logo. Findings The first three (required) elements were present on 77.6% of products examined. The mean font size of the Chief Medical Officer's (CMO) unit guidelines (usually on the back of the product) was 8.17-point. The mean size of pregnancy logos was 5.95 mm. The pregnancy logo was on average smaller on wine containers. Conclusions The UK Public Health Responsibility Deal alcohol labelling pledge has not been fully met. Labelling information frequently falls short of best practice, with font and logos smaller than would be accepted on other products with health effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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21. UK Government announces first major relaxation in the alcohol licensing laws for...
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Drummond, D. Colin
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ALCOHOLIC beverages ,ALCOHOL drinking ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Editorial. Comments on the alcohol licensing laws imposed by the British government. Concerns raised by the law; Details on the proposed legislation; Impact of the law to the country.
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- 2000
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22. Impact on alcohol purchasing of a ban on multi-buy promotions: a quasi-experimental evaluation comparing Scotland with England and Wales.
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Nakamura, Ryota, Suhrcke, Marc, Pechey, Rachel, Morciano, Marcello, Roland, Martin, and Marteau, Theresa M.
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LIQUOR laws ,ALCOHOLIC beverages ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Aims To evaluate the impact of the 2011 Scottish ban on multi-buy promotions of alcohol in retail stores. Design and setting Difference-in-differences analysis was used to estimate the impact of the ban on the volume of alcohol purchased by Scottish households, compared with those in England and Wales, between January 2010 and June 2012. Participants A total of 22 356 households in Scotland, England and Wales. Measurements Records of alcohol purchasing from each of four categories (beer and cider, wine, spirits and flavoured alcoholic beverages), as well as total volume of pure alcohol purchased. Findings Controlling for general time trends and household heterogeneity, there was no significant effect of the multi-buy ban in Scotland on volume of alcohol purchased either for the whole population or for individual socio-economic groups. There was also no significant effect on those who were large pre-ban purchasers of alcohol. Most multi-buys were for beer and cider or for wine. The frequency of shopping trips involving beer and cider purchases increased by 9.2% following the ban ( P < 0.01), while the number of products purchased on each trip decreased by 8.1% ( P < 0.01). For wine, however, these effects were not significant. Conclusions Banning multi-buy promotions for alcohol in Scotland did not reduce alcohol purchasing in the short term. Wider regulation of price promotion and price may be needed to achieve this. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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23. Be aware of Drinkaware.
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McCambridge, Jim, Kypri, Kypros, Miller, Peter, Hawkins, Ben, and Hastings, Gerard
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CORPORATIONS & ethics ,INDUSTRIES & ethics ,INDUSTRIES ,ALCOHOLIC beverages ,CONFLICT of interests ,ALCOHOL drinking ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
In 2006, Drinkaware was established as a charity in the United Kingdom following a memorandum of understanding between the Portman Group and various UK government agencies. This debate piece briefly reviews the international literature on industry social aspects organizations, examines the nature of Drinkaware's activities and considers how the public health community should respond. Although the British addiction field and the wider public health community have distanced themselves from the Portman Group, they have not done so from Drinkaware, even though Drinkaware was devised by the Portman Group to serve industry interests. Both long-standing and more recent developments indicate very high levels of industry influence on British alcohol policy, and Drinkaware provides one mechanism of influence. We suggest that working with, and for, industry bodies such as Drinkaware helps disguise fundamental conflicts of interest and serves only to legitimize corporate efforts to promote partnership as a means of averting evidence-based alcohol policies. We invite vigorous debate on these internationally significant issues and propose that similar industry bodies should be carefully studied in other countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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24. Vested Interests in Addiction Research and Policy. The challenge corporate lobbying poses to reducing society's alcohol problems: insights from UK evidence on minimum unit pricing.
- Author
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McCambridge, Jim, Hawkins, Benjamin, and Holden, Chris
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PREVENTION of alcoholism ,ALCOHOLIC beverages ,DRUG addiction ,INDUSTRIES ,LOBBYING ,POLICY sciences ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background There has been insufficient research attention to alcohol industry methods of influencing public policies. With the exception of the tobacco industry, there have been few studies of the impact of corporate lobbying on public health policymaking more broadly. Methods We summarize here findings from documentary analyses and interview studies in an integrative review of corporate efforts to influence UK policy on minimum unit pricing ( MUP) of alcohol 2007-10. Results Alcohol producers and retailers adopted a long-term, relationship-building approach to policy influence, in which personal contacts with key policymakers were established and nurtured, including when they were not in government. The alcohol industry was successful in achieving access to UK policymakers at the highest levels of government and at all stages of the policy process. Within the United Kingdom, political devolution and the formation for the first time of a Scottish National Party ( SNP) government disrupted the existing long-term strategy of alcohol industry actors and created the conditions for evidence-based policy innovations such as MUP. Conclusions Comparisons between policy communities within the United Kingdom and elsewhere are useful to the understanding of how different policy environments are amenable to influence through lobbying. Greater transparency in how policy is made is likely to lead to more effective alcohol and other public policies globally by constraining the influence of vested interests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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25. Drug classification: science, politics, both or neither?
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Kalant, Harold
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CANNABIS (Genus) ,DRUG control ,DRUG laws ,DRUGS of abuse laws ,MARIJUANA laws ,PHARMACEUTICAL policy ,SALVINORIN A ,HALLUCINOGENIC drugs ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Governments currently classify illicit drugs for various purposes: to guide courts in the sentencing of convicted violators of drug control laws, to prioritize targets of prevention measures and to educate the public about relative risks of the various drugs. It has been proposed that classification should be conducted by scientists and drug experts rather than by politicians, so that it will reflect only accurate factual knowledge of drug effects and risks rather than political biases. Although this is an appealing goal, it is inherently impossible because rank-ordering of the drugs inevitably requires value judgements concerning the different types of harm. Such judgements, even by scientists, depend upon subjective personal criteria and not only upon scientific facts. Moreover, classification that is meant to guide the legal system in controlling dangerous drug use can function only if it is in harmony with the values and sentiments of the public. In some respects, politicians may be better attuned to public attitudes and wishes, and to what policies the public will support, than are scientific experts. The problems inherent in such drug classification are illustrated by the examples of cannabis and of salvinorin A. They raise the question as to whether the classification process really serves any socially beneficial purpose. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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26. A safe, sensible and social AHRSE: New Labour.
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Anderson, Peter
- Subjects
ALCOHOLIC beverages ,ALCOHOL drinking ,DRUGS of abuse ,PUBLIC welfare ,SOCIAL policy ,ALCOHOLISM ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,PUBLIC health ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
When the Labour government came to power in the UK in 1997, it took over high and rising levels of alcohol consumption and alcohol-related harm. Contrary to ‘old Labour’'s views on alcohol policy, New Labour did nothing to reverse this trend, and, if anything, exacerbated it. Since New Labour has been in power, alcohol has become 40% more affordable; consumption has increased by 14% and alcohol-related deaths have increased by over 40%. New Labour viewed alcohol-related harm as a question of individual responsibility and, as expressed in its long awaited 2004 alcohol harm reduction strategy (commonly known as AHRSE), viewed partnerships with the alcohol industry as the solution to reducing harm. Ten years on we have safe, sensible and social, the 3Ss, AHRSE's next steps. On first reading it would seem that the government has learnt nothing from its mistakes of the previous ten years, and in its approach to alcohol policy continues to disable the public interest. Nevertheless, there remain areas where science might inform policy, including health sector policy where there is an emphasis on early diagnosis and treatment, and transport policy, where reducing the legal blood alcohol level to the European Commission maximum recommended level of 0.5g/L is again on the agenda. The 3Ss propose an independent review of the evidence of the relationship between alcohol price, promotion and harm. However, unless this fully reviews the international evidence of the relationship between the economic and physical availability of alcohol, the marketing of alcohol and alcohol related harm, AHRSE and its successor will continue to be a recipe for ineffectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. News and Notes.
- Subjects
THERAPEUTICS ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,DRUG control ,METHADONE treatment programs ,NALOXONE ,SMOKING ,AWARDS ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,DRUG overdose ,EDITORS ,HEROIN ,MEDICAL protocols ,MEDICAL prescriptions ,NARCOTICS ,PACKAGING ,TOBACCO ,WORLD Wide Web ,GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
The article presents news on addiction. Figures released by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Great Britain's Office for National Statistics indicate that smoking rates declined between 2005 and 2013 in the U.S. and between 2012 and 2013 in Great Britain. A "BBC News" report indicated that Harsh Vardham, India's Health Minister, announced new regulations which require health warnings to cover 85% of the surface of tobacco packages beginning on April 1, 2015.The World Health Organization (WHO) has released new guidelines titled "Community Management of Opioid Overdose".
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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