Article

Impact of minimum unit pricing on alcohol-related hospital outcomes: systematic review

Details

Citation

Maharaj T, Angus C, Fitzgerald N, Allen K, Stewart S, MacHale S & Ryan JD (2023) Impact of minimum unit pricing on alcohol-related hospital outcomes: systematic review. BMJ Open, 13 (2), Art. No.: e065220. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-065220

Abstract
Objective: To determine the impact of minimum unit pricing (MUP) on the primary outcome of alcohol-related hospitalisation, and secondary outcomes of length of stay, hospital mortality and alcohol-related liver disease in hospital. Design: Databases MEDLINE, Embase, Scopus, APA Psycinfo, CINAHL Plus and Cochrane Reviews were searched from 1 January 2011 to 11 November 2022. Inclusion criteria were studies evaluating the impact of minimum pricing policies, and we excluded non-minimum pricing policies or studies without alcohol-related hospital outcomes. The Effective Public Health Practice Project tool was used to assess risk of bias, and the Bradford Hill Criteria were used to infer causality for outcome measures. Setting: MUP sets a legally required floor price per unit of alcohol and is estimated to reduce alcohol-attributable healthcare burden. Participant: All studies meeting inclusion criteria from any country Intervention: Minimum pricing policy of alcohol Results: 22 studies met inclusion criteria; 6 natural experiments and 16 modelling studies. Countries included Australia, Canada, England, Northern Ireland, Ireland, Scotland, South Africa and Wales. Modelling studies estimated that MUP could reduce alcohol-related admissions by 3%–10% annually and the majority of real-world studies demonstrated that acute alcohol-related admissions responded immediately and reduced by 2%–9%, and chronic alcohol-related admissions lagged by 2–3 years and reduced by 4%–9% annually. Minimum pricing could target the heaviest consumers from the most deprived groups who tend to be at greatest risk of alcohol harms, and in so doing has the potential to reduce health inequalities. Using the Bradford Hill Criteria, we inferred a ‘moderate-to-strong’ causal link that MUP could reduce alcohol-related hospitalisation. Conclusions: Natural studies were consistent with minimum pricing modelling studies and showed that this policy could reduce alcohol-related hospitalisation and health inequalities.

Keywords
General Medicine

Journal
BMJ Open: Volume 13, Issue 2

StatusPublished
FundersESRC Economic and Social Research Council
Publication date28/02/2023
Publication date online03/02/2023
Date accepted by journal27/12/2022
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35713
PublisherBMJ
eISSN2044-6055

People (1)

Professor Niamh Fitzgerald

Professor Niamh Fitzgerald

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

Projects (1)

Alcohol Research Network (ACORN) UK/ROI
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