Reduction of Alcoholic Strength: Does It Matter for Public Health?

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Reduction of Alcoholic Strength: Does It Matter for Public Health? / Rehm, Jürgen; Rovira, Pol; Manthey, Jakob; Anderson, Peter.

in: NUTRIENTS, Jahrgang 15, Nr. 4, 11.02.2023, S. 910.

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@article{62a18ea97fe54bc5b568840785f221d6,
title = "Reduction of Alcoholic Strength: Does It Matter for Public Health?",
abstract = "In this work, reduction of alcoholic strength was discussed as a means to reduce consumption and alcohol-attributable harm. Statistical modelling was conducted to (1) estimate its potential for the largest six Western and Central European countries (France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, UK); (2) calculate the increase in taxation necessary to reach this potential, and (3) estimate the mortality gains achieved with the introduction of no- or low-alcohol beverages in the UK and Spain. The high public health potential of reducing alcoholic strength was demonstrated via modelling a scenario in which the strength of all beverages was reduced by 10%, which would avert thousands of deaths in these six European countries per year. However, methods by which to achieve these gains were not clear, as the alcohol industry has shown no inclination toward reductions in the alcoholic strength of beer, wine, or spirits via a reformulation on a large scale. The increase of excise taxation to achieve the public health gains of such a reduction would result in markedly increasing prices-a situation unlikely to be implemented in Europe. Finally, the introduction of beer and wine with an alcoholic strength below 0.5% led to some substitutions of higher-strength beverages, but did not show a marked public health impact. New taxation initiatives to achieve the potential of a reduction of alcoholic strength will need to be implemented.",
keywords = "Alcohol Drinking, Public Health, Alcoholic Beverages, Wine, Beer",
author = "J{\"u}rgen Rehm and Pol Rovira and Jakob Manthey and Peter Anderson",
year = "2023",
month = feb,
day = "11",
doi = "10.3390/nu15040910",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "910",
journal = "NUTRIENTS",
issn = "2072-6643",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Reduction of Alcoholic Strength: Does It Matter for Public Health?

AU - Rehm, Jürgen

AU - Rovira, Pol

AU - Manthey, Jakob

AU - Anderson, Peter

PY - 2023/2/11

Y1 - 2023/2/11

N2 - In this work, reduction of alcoholic strength was discussed as a means to reduce consumption and alcohol-attributable harm. Statistical modelling was conducted to (1) estimate its potential for the largest six Western and Central European countries (France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, UK); (2) calculate the increase in taxation necessary to reach this potential, and (3) estimate the mortality gains achieved with the introduction of no- or low-alcohol beverages in the UK and Spain. The high public health potential of reducing alcoholic strength was demonstrated via modelling a scenario in which the strength of all beverages was reduced by 10%, which would avert thousands of deaths in these six European countries per year. However, methods by which to achieve these gains were not clear, as the alcohol industry has shown no inclination toward reductions in the alcoholic strength of beer, wine, or spirits via a reformulation on a large scale. The increase of excise taxation to achieve the public health gains of such a reduction would result in markedly increasing prices-a situation unlikely to be implemented in Europe. Finally, the introduction of beer and wine with an alcoholic strength below 0.5% led to some substitutions of higher-strength beverages, but did not show a marked public health impact. New taxation initiatives to achieve the potential of a reduction of alcoholic strength will need to be implemented.

AB - In this work, reduction of alcoholic strength was discussed as a means to reduce consumption and alcohol-attributable harm. Statistical modelling was conducted to (1) estimate its potential for the largest six Western and Central European countries (France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, UK); (2) calculate the increase in taxation necessary to reach this potential, and (3) estimate the mortality gains achieved with the introduction of no- or low-alcohol beverages in the UK and Spain. The high public health potential of reducing alcoholic strength was demonstrated via modelling a scenario in which the strength of all beverages was reduced by 10%, which would avert thousands of deaths in these six European countries per year. However, methods by which to achieve these gains were not clear, as the alcohol industry has shown no inclination toward reductions in the alcoholic strength of beer, wine, or spirits via a reformulation on a large scale. The increase of excise taxation to achieve the public health gains of such a reduction would result in markedly increasing prices-a situation unlikely to be implemented in Europe. Finally, the introduction of beer and wine with an alcoholic strength below 0.5% led to some substitutions of higher-strength beverages, but did not show a marked public health impact. New taxation initiatives to achieve the potential of a reduction of alcoholic strength will need to be implemented.

KW - Alcohol Drinking

KW - Public Health

KW - Alcoholic Beverages

KW - Wine

KW - Beer

U2 - 10.3390/nu15040910

DO - 10.3390/nu15040910

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 36839266

VL - 15

SP - 910

JO - NUTRIENTS

JF - NUTRIENTS

SN - 2072-6643

IS - 4

ER -