1. Quantifying nicotine and alcohol consumption in New Zealand using wastewater‐based epidemiology timed to coincide with census.
- Author
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Trowsdale, Sam, Price, Mackay, Wilkins, Chris, Tscharke, Ben, Mueller, Jochen, and Baker, Tom
- Subjects
ALCOHOL drinking ,NICOTINE ,LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry ,CENSUS ,SEWAGE disposal plants - Abstract
Introduction: Accurate and timely information about nicotine and alcohol consumption is needed to inform effective policy. Wastewater‐based epidemiology provides an opportunity to quantify consumption, which can complement traditional data collection methods. Methods: Wastewater samples were collected from seven wastewater treatment plants on seven consecutive days in three regions of New Zealand during the same week as the national census (6 March 2018). Samples were analysed for nicotine and alcohol metabolites using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry. Detailed catchment maps were developed and per capita consumption calculated. Results: Observed nicotine consumption (mean 1528 ± 412 cigarettes/day/1000 people) was similar to national sales data. Observed alcohol consumption (mean 1155 ± 764 standard drinks/day/1000 people) was lower than estimated using alcohol availability data. Consumption of nicotine and alcohol was generally higher in the Bay of Plenty and Canterbury compared to Auckland, mirroring trends in the New Zealand Health Survey. Intra‐regional differences were observed and the patterns could not be attributed to urbanisation alone. Nicotine consumption was consistent throughout the week whereas alcohol consumption often peaked at the weekend. Nicotine consumption was correlated with neighbourhood‐deprivation. There was little correlation for alcohol. Discussion and Conclusions: Wastewater‐based epidemiology provides a quantitative dataset that complements traditional methods of investigating nicotine and alcohol consumption. Timing data collection to coincide with the census helps to account for the influence of population mobility when normalising consumption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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