TY - JOUR PY - 2024// TI - An assessment of federal alcohol policies in Canada and priority recommendations: results from the 3rd Canadian Alcohol Policy Evaluation Project JO - Canadian journal of public health A1 - Farkouh, Elizabeth K. A1 - Vallance, Kate A1 - Wettlaufer, Ashley A1 - Giesbrecht, Norman A1 - Asbridge, Mark A1 - Farrell-Low, Amanda M. A1 - Gagnon, Marilou A1 - Price, Tina R. A1 - Priore, Isabella A1 - Shelley, Jacob A1 - Sherk, Adam A1 - Shield, Kevin D. A1 - Solomon, Robert A1 - Stockwell, Tim R. A1 - Thompson, Kara A1 - Vishnevsky, Nicole A1 - Naimi, Timothy S. SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - OBJECTIVE: To systematically assess the Canadian federal government's current alcohol policies in relation to public health best practices.

METHODS: The 2022 Canadian Alcohol Policy Evaluation (CAPE) Project assessed federal alcohol policies across 10 domains. Policy domains were weighted according to evidence for their relative impact, including effectiveness and scope. A detailed scoring rubric of best practices was developed and externally reviewed by international experts. Policy data were collected between June and December 2022, using official legislation, government websites, and data sources identified from previous iterations of CAPE as sources. Contacts within relevant government departments provided any additional data sources, reviewed the accuracy and completeness of the data, and provided amendments as needed. Data were scored independently by members of the research team. Final policy scores were tabulated and presented as a weighted overall average score and as unweighted domain-specific scores.

RESULTS: Compared to public health best practices, the federal government of Canada scored 37% overall. The three most impactful domains-(1) pricing and taxation, (2) marketing and advertising controls, and (3) impaired driving countermeasures-received some of the lowest scores (39%, 10%, and 40%, respectively). Domain-specific scores varied considerably from 0% for minimum legal age policies to 100% for controls on physical availability of alcohol.

CONCLUSION: Many evidence-informed alcohol policies have not been adopted, or beenĀ adopted only partially, by the Canadian federal government. Urgent adoption of the recommended policies is needed to prevent and reduce the enormous health, social, and economic costs of alcohol use in Canada.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0008-4263 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.17269/s41997-024-00889-3 ID - ref1 ER -