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Journal Article

Citation

Athanasopoulos G, Sarafidis V, Weatherburn D, Miller R. Addiction 2021; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/add.15774

PMID

34859528

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In February 2014, the government of New South Wales (NSW), Australia introduced new restrictions (known as the 'lockout laws') on the sale of alcohol in licensed premises in two of Sydney's most prominent entertainment districts, Kings Cross (KX) and the central business district (CBD). This study aimed to determine (1) whether the introduction of the lockout laws was the point at which the time pattern of the assault series in the KX and CBD entertainment precincts changed, (2) whether the apparent reduction in assault in these precincts persists when we control for common variations in assault across the entire state of NSW, (3) whether the reduction in assault in the KX and CBD entertainment precincts resulted in a displacement of the assault problem into other areas, and (4) whether there is a net reduction in assault after taking any spill-over or displacement effects into account.

DESIGN: Structural break analysis was used to determine the date at which the time pattern of assaults changed. Interrupted time series analysis with a rest-of-NSW comparator was used to assess the change in assault.

SETTING, CASES, AND MEASUREMENTS: The monthly totals of incidents of non-domestic assaults reported to the NSW Police between January 2009 and March 2019 (n = 123).

FINDINGS: The structural break in assaults occurred in January 2014 rather than in February 2014, when the lockout laws were introduced. The reduction in assault persists even when we control for common influences across NSW as a whole. In particular, from January 2014 onwards, assaults fell immediately by 22% (a downward step) in KX (90% confidence interval (CI) = 15%, 28%) and by 33% in CBD, (90% CI = 19%, 47%). Assaults continued declining in KX (trend-break coefficient = -0.094, 90% CI = -0.192, 0.005). The reduction in assault in the KX and CBD precincts is associated with a rise in assault in areas surrounding these precincts. The net effect, nonetheless, remains a lower level of assault. In particular, we estimate that the net reduction over the three areas combined was 1670 assaults (i.e., 27 per month).

CONCLUSION: Some of the initial reduction in assault in the Kings Cross and the central business district of Sydney, Australia previously attributed to the February 2014 introduction of lockout laws may have been a response to publicity surrounding recent deaths connected with alcohol-related violence.


Language: en

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