Title: Turning The Corner With Alcohol
1- Turning The Corner With Alcohol ?
- The Scottish Experience with
- Prevention
- Treatment
- Policy
Peter Rice, Consultant Psychiatrist, NHS Tayside
Vice Chair, Alcohol Focus Scotland
2The Scots A Peaceable People
3We Travel Round The World Making Friends
4We Have A Noble Tradition in Medicine
5Alcohol Related Deaths in Scotland 1980 - 2003
ISD 2005
ISD 2005
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7Liver Cirrhosis Death Rates 1950 2006 An
International Comparison
8SCOTTISH ALCOHOL HARM or INTOXICATION
ADMISSIONS THE AGE and GENDER PROFILE
9UK Alcohol Consumption
10INTERNATIONAL TRENDS IN ALCOHOL
CONSUMPTION 1990
2002 Consumption in pure litres of alcohol per
head total population
Ireland 7.6 10.8
UK 7.7 9.6
Netherlands 8.1 8.0 Belgium 9.9 7.9 Au
stria 10.4 9.2
New Zealand 8.8 6.9 Australia 8.5 7.3
World Drink Trends 2004
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12Male Cancer Deaths in Scotland 2007 - 1997
13- SUICIDE IN SCOTLAND
- THE CONFIDENTIAL ENQUIRY
- Suicides identified from General Registrar Office
of Scotland - NHS Boards identify those in contact
- with services in previous 12 months
- Detailed questionnaire to Consultant
- Psychiatrist. (97-100 return rate)
- Data analysed by Confidential Enquiry
- team at University of Manchester
- First published analysis of Scotland only data in
June 2008
14Suicides in Scotland 1998-2005 Rates of
Substance Misuse Alcohol Dependence 17 Drug
Dependence 9 Alcohol Misuse
58 Drug Misuse 39
15- It is likely that alcohol and drugs lie behind
Scotlands higher rates of suicide and - homicide.
- Our findings support the view
- that alcohol and drugs are the most pressing
mental health problems in Scotland
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18Alcohol and Violence
in 60 of violent incidents (2000-04) victims
believed perpetrators under influence of
alcohol
19Alcohol and Offending
20Child Protection and Parental Substance Misuse
- Of all 109 children on CP Register in a Scottish
Council in 2007. - 65 with identified parental substance misuse.
- 1/3 Drugs only. Mainly paternal use.
- 1/3 Alcohol only. Mainly maternal or both parents
use. - 1/3 Drugs and Alcohol
- Commonly associated with Domestic Violence.
- Children registered due to Physical Neglect
(60) -
Emotional Abuse (35)
21Fragmenting Scotlands Cohesion total cost
2.25bn
- Healthier
- 11 of AE
- 1 death every 6 hours
- Safer Stronger
- 45 of prisoners
- 65 of homicides
- Wealthier Fairer
- 820m productivity loss
- Smarter
- gt65,000 children
- 1 in 3 divorces
- 40 of 15yr olds 15 of 13yr olds
22MeasurePricingAvailability - Age limit-
Outlet DensitySafer Drinking- Sever training-
Safer glassesTreatment- Brief
InterventionsRegulating Ads
PromotionsInformation- Schools- Product
Labelling
ALCOHOL No Ordinary Commodity
- Effect
- High
- High
- Mid
- Mid
- Low
WORLD HEALTH ORGANISATION 2003
23Relationship between price and alcohol
consumption in UK 1960-2002
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26 THE ARITHMETIC 36 cans Tennents Lager for
15 36x440mlx4 634 ml alcohol 63 UK units
for 15 10mls alcohol for 24 pence 1 Standard
NZ drink for 0.74
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28Ban sale of cheap alcohol, Tesco urges
Brown Britain's biggest supermarket will call on
Gordon Brown today to introduce new laws to ban
the sale of cut-price alcohol amid growing
concern over the level of drink-fuelled crime and
disorder. Tesco said there was now a need for
legislation to "ensure responsible pricing on
alcohol", but urged the Government to take the
lead. Competition laws prevent it from discussing
an industry-wide alcohol price increase with its
rivals, but the supermarket said it would support
a mandatory rise.
February 21st 2008
29- Population Approach High Risk
Approach - - Overall reduction of consumption - Promotes
responsible alcohol use - Target is whole population -
Targets segments of the population - National action - Local solutions
- - Regulation and legislation - Information on
products and harm - Wider public interest - Personal
choice and responsibility - Wide range of outcomes - Specific targets
- (Binge drinking, Drink Driving)
- Early interventions - Treatment for
dependence - Leadership - Partnership
30The Licensing Objectives - Prevention of Crime
and Disorder - Securing Public Safety -
Preventing Public Nuisance - Protecting and
Improving Public Health - Protecting Children
from Harm.
31What do we expect?
- Reduced consumption and harm
- More responsible retailing
- Licensing policies to suit area
- Public engagement in process
- Fairness
32HEALTH IMPROVEMENT TARGETS 2008
- - Coronary Heart Disease
- Childrens Dental Care
- Childhood Obesity
- Suicide Prevention
- Smoking Cessation
- Breastfeeding and.
- Achieve agreed number of screenings using the
setting-appropriate screening tool and
appropriate alcohol brief intervention, in line
with SIGN 74 guidelines by 2010/11
33- A TARGETED SCREENING APPROACH
- - 19 of adult population, c 800,000 seen in
Primary Care with target presentations - pop seen per year
- Mental health problems (depression) 4.9
- Anxiety related problems 5.1
- Fatigue/malaise/ dizziness 4.6
- All injuries 7.2
- GI presentations (including gastritis, ulcer,
pancreatitis) 0.5 - Alcohol and/or substance misuse 1.5
- - 25 of those screened by FAST are positive
- - 75 receive Brief Intervention
- - Potential number in AE, general hospital and
Ante Natal settings, c 135,000 will compensate
for number missed in Primary Care.
34WHERES THE MONEY ??
- Investment of 125m over 3 years.
- First call on the additional funding should be to
enable NHS Boards to meet these targets, and for
brief interventions to become part of the
standard services offered by NHS Scotland. - We anticipate that considerable work will be
required in 2008/09 to establish delivery
arrangements and build capacity across the
priority settings of - Primary Care,
- AE
- Ante natal
- Acute Care
- Deprived populations
35Alcohol Problems A Continuum
36Alcohol Interventions A Continuum
Screen BI
371 UK Drink is 10 mls of alcohol 250ml
beer 80ml wine
38A Stepped Care ApproachSBI in a Care Pathway
39SCOTTISH GOVERNMENT PUBLIC HEALTH ALLOCATIONS
08/09
Increased screening for alcohol misuse will have
a knock-on effect on the volume of downstream
services required. As a consequence the overall
package delivers a considerable uplift in funding
for early intervention and treatment (including
support for newly identified dependent drinkers),
and for prevention activities. Where
appropriate, services should comply with guidance
contained in the Health Technology Assessment
Report 3 on Prevention and Relapse in Alcohol
Dependence.
40Cost Effectiveness
Recent studies suggest that alcohol treatment has
both short and long-term economic benefits. The
Review of the effectiveness of treatment for
alcohol problems suggests that provision of
alcohol treatment to 10 per cent of the dependent
drinking population within the UK would reduce
public sector resource costs by between 109
million and 156 million each year. Analysis
from the United Kingdom Alcohol Treatment Trial
suggests that for every 1 spent on alcohol
treatment, the public sector saves 5.
41Scottish Strategy 2008
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43- SCOTTISH GOVERNMENT PROPOSALS 2009
- A Minimum Price for Alcohol
- (Example of 40p per unit / 1.20 per NZ
standard drink) - No discounts for multiple purchase. (3 for 2, 20
for 12) - Age limit of 21 in off sales.
- Social responsibility fee from industry for city
centre management. - More support and treatment.
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