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Journal Article

Citation

Laslett AM, Edwards N, Allsop S, Ponicki W, Chikritzhs T. J. Stud. Alcohol Drugs 2022; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Alcohol Research Documentation, Inc., Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey)

DOI

10.15288/jsad.20-00400

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:

Parental or carer alcohol use, particularly heavy regular or episodic use, can increase the risk of child maltreatment within individual families. At the national level, higher per capita alcohol consumption has been associated with increased child injury mortality in Australia. The study aimed to investigate whether an association exists between substantiated child maltreatment cases, numbers of licensed outlets and average alcohol sales volumes at the community level (local government area) over a thirteen-year period across Western Australia (WA).

Method:

Annual panel data were obtained for 132 WA Local Government Areas (LGAs) over the period 2001-2013. Bayesian conditional autoregressive Poisson regression was applied to test associations between numbers of substantiated child maltreatment cases and per-population densities and mean sales volumes of off-trade and on-trade alcohol outlets. Associations were adjusted for presence of local alcohol restrictions and mandatory reporting, density of on-trade outlets and their sales, demographic and socio-economic variables.

Results:

Comprehensive area-level alcohol bans and policies restricting alcohol sales reduced child maltreatment by 9.6% and 38.5%, while mandatory reporting of child maltreatment increased substantiations by 15.3%. Counterintuitively, for each additional 1,000 litres of ethanol sold per off-premise outlet there was a 3.7% decline in child maltreatment.

Conclusions:

Local government alcohol restrictions predicted reduced child abuse and neglect.

FINDINGS that increases in off-trade outlets predicted decreased risk of child maltreatment at a local level are seemingly at odds with these findings, but outlet density may be acting as a measure of less disorganization. Alcohol policy that affects alcohol availability can reduce child maltreatment in at risk areas. Local area alcohol bans and interventions reducing hours of sale should be further evaluated to confirm these findings.


Language: en

Keywords

alcohol availability; alcohol restrictions; alcohol sales; child maltreatment

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