Population-wide alcohol control laws did not have a positive equity impact on hazardous alcohol consumption. Targeted interventions to disadvantaged groups may be needed to address the hazardous alcohol consumption inequality gap…

Author

José Luis Sandoval (email: Idris.Guessous@hcuge.ch), Teresa Leão, Jean-Marc Theler, Thierry Favrod-Coune, Barbara Broers, Jean-Michel Gaspoz, Pedro Marques-Vidal and Idris Guessous

Citation

Sandoval JL, Leão T, Theler J, et al Alcohol control policies and socioeconomic inequalities in hazardous alcohol consumption: a 22-year cross-sectional study in a Swiss urban population BMJ Open 2019;9:e028971. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-028971


Source
BMJ Open
Release date
24/05/2019

Alcohol Control Policies and Socioeconomic Inequalities in Hazardous Alcohol Consumption: A 22-Year Cross-Sectional Study in a Swiss Urban Population

Research article

Abstract

Objective

Alcohol use represents a large socioeconomic and disease burden and displays a socioeconomic status (SES) gradient. Several alcohol control laws were devised and implemented, but their equity impact remains undetermined.

The study ascertained if an SES gradient in alcohol consumption exists in Geneva (Switzerland) and assessed the equity impact of the alcohol control laws implemented during the last two decades.

Design

Repeated cross-sectional survey study.

Setting

The study used data from non-abstinent participants, aged 35–74 years, from the population-based cross-sectional Bus Santé study (n=16 725), between 1993 and 2014.

Methods

SES indicators included educational attainment (primary, secondary and tertiary) and occupational level (high, medium and low). The study defined four survey periods according to the implemented alcohol control laws and hazardous alcohol consumption (outcome variable) as >30 g/day for men and >20 g/day for women.

The Slope Index of Inequality (SII) and Relative Index of Inequality (RII) were used to quantify absolute and relative inequalities, respectively, and were compared between legislative periods.

Results

Lower educated men had a higher frequency of hazardous alcohol consumption. Lower educated women had less hazardous consumption. Over time, hazardous alcohol consumption decreased, except in lower educated men.

Education-related inequalities were observed in men in all legislative periods and did not vary between them. Similar results were observed using the occupational level as SES indicator. In women, significant inverse SES gradients were observed using educational attainment but not for occupational level.

Conclusions

Population-wide alcohol control laws did not have a positive equity impact on hazardous alcohol consumption. Targeted interventions to disadvantaged groups may be needed to address the hazardous alcohol consumption inequality gap.


Source Website: BMJ