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Scoping response system management of alcohol’s harm to others in lower middle income countries

Authors :
Laslett Anne-Marie
Waleewong Orratai
Obot Isidore
Benegal Vivek
Hettige Siri
Florenzano Ramon
Hanh Hoang Thi My
Hanh Vu Thi Minh
Rao Girish N
Room Robin
Source :
Nordic Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, Vol 33, Iss 5-6, Pp 515-536 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
SAGE Publishing, 2016.

Abstract

AIMS - As part of the WHO Harm from others’ drinking project, Thailand, Sri Lanka, India, Chile, Nigeria and Vietnam undertook scoping studies to examine: which service agencies in low and middle income countries responded to people affected by others’ drinking; how commonly key informants from these agencies indicated alcohol was part of the problems they managed; and whether any routine reporting systems collected information on alcohol’s harm to others (AHTO) and the types and examples of harms experienced across the six countries. METHODS - Researchers synthetised within country peer-review literature, reports, news and agency website information. Additionally, researchers interviewed key informants to investigate current structures, functions and practices of service agencies, and in particular their recording practices surrounding cases involving others’ drinking. RESULTS - 111 key informants agreed to participate from 91 purposively selected agencies from health, social protection, justice and police, and ‘other’ sectors. National and provincial level data, as well as state-run and civil society agency data were collected. Diverse service response systems managed AHTO in the different countries. A large range in the percentage of all cases attributed to AHTO was identified. Case story examples from each country illustrate the different responses to, and the nature of, many severe problems experienced because of others’ drinking. CONCLUSIONS - AHTO was a major issue for service systems in LMIC, and significantly contributed to their workload, yet, very few recording systems routinely collected AHTO data. Recommendations are outlined to improve AHTO data collection across multiple sectors and enable LMIC to better identify and respond to AHTO.

Details

Language :
Danish, English, Norwegian, Swedish
ISSN :
14586126
Volume :
33
Issue :
5-6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Nordic Studies on Alcohol and Drugs
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5e8e62e7e1444d16a976bdb5fce5b49e
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1515/nsad-2016-0043