Myran, Daniel T and Friesen, Erik and Talarico, Robert and Gaudreault, Adrienne and Taljaard, Monica and Hobin, Erin and Smith, Brendan T and Schwartz, Naomi and Giesbrecht, Norman and Crépault, Jean-François and Tanuseputro, Peter and Manuel, Douglas G (2024) The association between alcohol retail access and health care visits attributable to alcohol for individuals with and without a history of alcohol-related health-care use. Addiction, 119, (9), pp. 1554-1563. https://doi.org/10.1111/add.16566.
External website: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/add.16...
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Alcohol retail access is associated with alcohol use and related harms. This study measured whether this association differs for people with and without heavy and disordered patterns of alcohol use.
DESIGN The study used a repeated cross-sectional analysis of health administrative databases.
SETTING, PARTICIPANTS/CASES All residents of Ontario, Canada aged 10-105 years with universal health coverage (n = 10 677 604 in 2013) were included in the analysis.
MEASUREMENTS Quarterly rates of emergency department (ED) and outpatient visits attributable to alcohol in 464 geographic regions between 2013 and 2019 were measured. Quarterly off-premises alcohol retail access scores were calculated (average drive to the closest seven stores) for each geographic region. Mixed-effect linear regression models adjusted for area-level socio-demographic covariates were used to examine associations between deciles of alcohol retail access and health-care visits attributable to alcohol. Stratified analyses were run for individuals with and without prior alcohol-attributable health-care use in the past 2 years.
FINDINGS We included 437 707 ED visits and 505 271 outpatient visits attributable to alcohol. After adjustment, rates of ED visits were 39% higher [rate ratio (RR) = 1.39, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.20-1.61] and rates of outpatient visits were 49% higher (RR = 1.49, 95% CI = 1.26-1.75) in the highest versus lowest decile of alcohol access. There was a positive association between alcohol access and outpatient visits attributable to alcohol for individuals without prior health-care attributable to alcohol (RR = 1.65, 95% CI = 1.39-1.95 for the highest to lowest decile of alcohol access) but not for individuals with prior health-care attributable to alcohol (RR = 1.08, 95% CI = 0.90-1.30). There was a positive association between alcohol access and ED visits attributable to alcohol for individuals with and without prior health-care for alcohol for ED visits.
CONCLUSION In Ontario, Canada, greater alcohol retail access appears to be associated with higher rates of emergency department (ED) and outpatient health-care visits attributable to alcohol. Individuals without prior health-care for alcohol may be more susceptible to greater alcohol retail access for outpatient but not ED visits attributable to alcohol.
G Health and disease > Substance use disorder (addiction) > Alcohol use disorder
J Health care, prevention, harm reduction and treatment > Type of care
J Health care, prevention, harm reduction and treatment > Health care programme, service or facility
L Social psychology and related concepts > Physical context, location or place > Alcohol beverage sales outlet (shop / pub / bar)
MP-MR Policy, planning, economics, work and social services > Policy > Policy on substance use
VA Geographic area > Canada
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