The design of the International Alcohol Control (IAC) study is modelled on the International Tobacco Control study and aims to assess the impact of alcohol policies in different cultural and socio-economic contexts on policy-related behaviours (e.g. purchasing behaviour including time of purchase, price paid; social supply, alcohol marketing, driving under the influence of alcohol) and alcohol consumption…

Author

Taisia Huckle, Sally Casswell (E-mail: s.casswell@massey.ac.nz), Anne-Marie Mackintosh, Surasak Chaiyasong, Pham Viet Cuong, Neo Morojele, Charles Parry, Petra Meier, John Holmes, Sarah Callinan, Marina Piazza, Elena Kazantseva, Tsogzolmaa Bayandorj, Gaile Gray-Philip, Sharon Haliday, Sungsoo Chun, Miriam Welch, Thomas Graydon-Guy, Karl Parker

Citation

Huckle, T., Casswell, S., Mackintosh, A.-M., Chaiyasong, S., Viet Cuong, P., Morojele, N., Parry, C., Meier, P., Holmes, J., Callinan, S., Piazza, M., Kazantseva, E., Bayandorj, T., Gray-Philip, G., Haliday, S., Chun, S., Welch, M., Graydon-Guy, T. and Parker, K. (2018), The International Alcohol Control Study: Methodology and implementation. Drug Alcohol Rev.. doi:10.1111/dar.12650


Source
Drug and Alcohol Review
Release date
12/01/2018

Special Issue

The International Alcohol Control Study: Methodology and implementation

The design of the International Alcohol Control (IAC) study is modelled on the International Tobacco Control study and aims to assess the impact of alcohol policies in different cultural and socio-economic contexts on policy-related behaviours (e.g. purchasing behaviour including time of purchase, price paid; social supply, alcohol marketing, driving under the influence of alcohol) and alcohol consumption.

Abstract

Introduction and Aims

The International Alcohol Control (IAC) Study is a multi-country collaborative project to assess patterns of alcohol consumption and the impact of alcohol control policy. The aim of this paper is to report the methods and implementation of the IAC.

Design and Methods

The IAC has been implemented among alcohol users 16–65 years in high- and middle-income countries: Australia, England, Scotland, New Zealand, St Kitts and Nevis, Thailand, South Africa, Peru, Mongolia and Vietnam (the latter four samples were sub-national). Two research instruments were used: the IAC survey of alcohol users and the Alcohol Environmental Protocol (a protocol for policy analysis). The survey was administered via computer-assisted interview and the Alcohol Environmental Protocol data were collected via document review, administrative or commercial data and key informant interviews.

Results

The IAC instruments were readily adapted for cross-country use. The IAC methodology has provided cross-country survey data on key measures of alcohol consumption (quantity, frequency and volume), aspects of policy relevant behaviour and policy implementation: availability, price, purchasing, marketing and drink driving. The median response rate for all countries was 60% (range 16% to 99%). Where data on alcohol available for consumption were available the validity of survey consumption measures were assessed by calculating survey coverage found to be 86% or above. Differential response bias was handled, to the extent it could be, using post-stratification weights.

Discussion and Conclusions

The IAC study will allow for cross-country analysis of alcohol consumption patterns, the relationship between alcohol use and policy relevant behaviour in different countries.


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