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Drug and alcohol review · Sep 2011
Do community interventions targeting licensed venues reduce alcohol-related emergency department presentations?
- Peter Miller, Anders Sønderlund, Kerri Coomber, Darren Palmer, Karen Gillham, Jennifer Tindall, and John Wiggers.
- Deakin University, School of Psychology, Geelong, Australia. petermiller.mail@gmail.com
- Drug Alcohol Rev. 2011 Sep 1;30(5):546-53.
Introduction And AimsExcessive alcohol consumption is related to substantial health and social order costs. Many of the harms have been identified as coming from licensed venues. Most communities struggle to find interventions that are effective, particularly in an environment of little federal government action. Furthermore, most interventions are based on little or no empirical evidence. This study aims to investigate the effect of a suite of interventions on emergency department (ED) attendances in Geelong, Australia.Design And MethodsThis paper reports stage one findings from the Dealing with Alcohol-Related Problems in the Night-time Economy project (DANTE) and specifically examines all alcohol-related injury frequencies before to after intervention in the City of Greater Geelong of Victoria, Australia, from 2005 to 2009. Auto-regressive integrated moving average time-series were used to determine the effect of the interventions on ED attendances in Geelong.ResultsThere were 3934 triage presentations involving alcohol. Over two-thirds (68.9%) of triage presentations were male and over half (58.5%) of alcohol-related attendances occurred on the weekend. The time-series analyses indicated that ID scanners (z = 2.66, P < 0.001) and the Just Think awareness campaign (z = 4.21, P < 0.001) were significant predictors of increases in alcohol-related injury presentation rates to the ED.Discussion And ConclusionsOverall, the community interventions implemented have not been associated with reduced alcohol-related attendances at the ED. The findings raise questions about whether targeting the night-time economy is effective and whether interventions should instead be targeted at reducing whole-of-community alcohol consumption.© 2011 Australasian Professional Society on Alcohol and other Drugs.
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